Tuesday, April 08, 2008

Civilian Population Joins Nationwide Home Front Drill on 3rd Day


Hana Levi Julian

Israelis throughout the country were “alerted to a nationwide emergency” at 10:00 a.m. Tuesday morning when air raid sirens kicked off Day 3 of the five-day Home Front security drill to implement lessons learned in the 2006 Second Lebanon War. Tuesday marks the first day in which the civilian population joins the IDF and government workers in the exercise, which is continuing at local authorities, public institutions, IDF bases and police stations.

The sirens were activated for 90 seconds, prompting teachers and school administrators to take children in schools and preschools to shelters where they were to stay for approximately 10 minutes as sirens rose and fell, rose and fell.

In an actual emergency, the public will be notified and given instructions over public address systems and through the media, including through the Home Front Command's English website.

Government workers are also participating in the drill, the first exercise of its kind to be held under the supervision of the new National Emergency Authority, dubbed “Rachel” in Hebrew.

The rocket-battered city of Sderot and other Gaza Belt communities are exempt from the drill because a Kassam rocket or mortar attack is already an imminent reality.

The Color Red incoming rocket alert continues to have people in those areas racing for shelters and it was believed that a siren would only confuse residents, already repeatedly traumatized by the thousands of rocket attacks absorbed by the city over the past seven years. In case of a real attack in other parts of the country, the siren will be lengthened and there will be announcements in the media.

Veteran news anchor Gadi Sukenik was to broadcast emergency instructions from 10:00 to 11:00 a.m. from the Home Front Command’s new studio on Channel 33, as will happen in a real emergency. Speaking on behalf of HFC (Home Front Command)’s Major-General Yair Golan, Sukenik was to broadcast guidance and tutorial videos on how to choose a protected space and how to behave during an alert.

Day Four of the drill, scheduled for Wednesday, will ramp up the pressure with massive simulated missile attacks on all parts of the country.

In the drill, Israel will face multiple rocket attacks by enemies firing missiles bearing chemical warheads. Emergency medical and rescue services and security personnel will be expected to respond appropriately.

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