Germany's armed forces are working on clarifying a provision in a recently updated military service law that requires fighting-age men to gain permission to leave the country for more than three months, the defence ministry said. The law went into effect in January, but the requirement - which theoretically affects millions of men between the ages of 17 and 45 in the European Union's most populous country - had gone mostly unnoticed until a local newspaper report highlighted it on Friday.
Germany works to clarify new rules on fighting-age men leaving country
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Story Timeline
Sat 05:07 - n-tv Politik
Deregistration from the Bundeswehr: Men up to 45 must obtain approval for longer stays abroad
Sat 11:50 - Handelsblatt Politik
Bundeswehr: Men up to 45 years of age must report longer stays abroad
Sat 12:24 - Die Welt
Since January, men between 17 and 45 have needed a permit to leave the country for longer periods
Sat 15:09 - DW All
German men need military permit for extended stays abroad
Sat 15:09 - DW Top
German men need military permit for extended stays abroad
Sat 20:44 - Die Welt
Stays abroad only with approval? A vague new regulation and the consequences
Sat 21:16 - BBC Europe
German males under 45 may need military approval for long stays abroad
Sun 08:46 - Sky News (UK)
German men could require military permission to leave country for more than three months
Sun 11:45 - The Guardian
Uproar in Germany over law requiring men get military approval for long stays abroad
Mon 09:09 - Euronews
Going abroad: What will Germany's new military service act actually change
Tue 10:10 - France 24
Germany works to clarify new rules on fighting-age men leaving country