IDF: 8 soldiers killed in accidents in 2012

Army data shows a rise in casualties in accidents and decline in deaths of soldiers on leave; dozens were injured in training
Yoav Zitun|
An IDF reportrevealed that 2012 saw an increase in the number of soldiers killed in accidents and a decline of in deaths of soldiers on leave.
According to the security branch of the Israeli Ground Forces, eight soldiers were killed in accidents last year, compared to only one in 2011 and 20 in 2010.
Related stories:
The accidents include a jeep crash in the Golan Heights that killed an Artillery Corps soldier ,a lighting fixture collapse inMount Herzl that killed an officer, a car accident thatclaimed the lives of two Navy officers, a bus crash that claimed the life of a military police officer andan incident in which a tank ran over a soldier while training in the Golan Heights, among others.
Army jeep overturns, injuring soldier 
In addition, five soldiers were killed in accidents while on leave, the lowest number recorded in the last decade.
In 2011, 14 soldiers died while on leave, nine in 2010 and in the beginning of the decade numbers were even higher.
Overall, 85 soldiers were hurt during training – one was killed, three were wounded and 81 lightly hurt – compared to 67 in 2011. There was a rise in accidental bullet discharges as well.
  • An investigation into an accident near Eilat, during which an army Defender jeep overturned, indicated the soldier was driving while drunk.
The reserves soldier apparently exceeded the speed limit while descending towards Eilat from the 80th division base. He lost control of the vehicle and flipped the jeep. He suffered moderate to serious injuries.
In addition, the IDF explained that the incident in which an officer was wounded in a military police firing range wasn't caused by a bullet discharge, but because the gun recoiled after a cadet accidently placed it on its automatic setting instead of on its semi-automatic one.
Follow Ynetnews on Facebook and Twitter
  • Receive Ynetnews updates directly to your desktop
Comments
The commenter agrees to the privacy policy of Ynet News and agrees not to submit comments that violate the terms of use, including incitement, libel and expressions that exceed the accepted norms of freedom of speech.
""