Illustration
Playing Mobile Legends Must Join Military Service? This is Dedi Mulyadi's Explanation
West Java Governor Dedi Mulyadi's statement that students who play Mobile Legends will be required to do military service went viral on social media.
Well, the players of this game developed by Moonton are certainly curious and wondering about the meaning of this statement.
Will all students who play MLBB go to barracks? Or is there a specific reason why students must join the military?
Let's take a look at the complete explanation!
Also read:
Regarding this matter, Dedi provided a complete explanation in an interview reported on the KompasTV YouTube channel.
He explained that those who participated in the military service were students with problems. Starting from students who brawled, drank alcohol to sleeping at night.
Furthermore, those who participate in military service are not all students who play Mobile Legends. But rather, those who play games until they forget the time.
Then, students who skip school, are disrespectful to their parents and often cause trouble.
"He's a brawler, a drunkard, a Mobile Legends player who doesn't want to go to bed at night, fights his parents, makes threats, makes trouble at school, skips school all the time, goes to school from home, doesn't arrive at school," he said as reported by the channel YouTube KompasTV.
He stated that military service does not change the status of students because they will study like other students. However, the focus is on improving the lifestyle of students who are having problems.
"Their student status will not be lost, they will remain as junior high school A, senior high school B students, and then they will continue to study as usual, but their lifestyle will be changed, that's difficult, you can't do it at home," he said.
Some of these improvements include:
"On Monday and Thursday they are taught to fast on Monday and Thursday, after Maghrib prayers they learn religious studies for Muslims, that's good, this is a direction of guidance that they don't get in the scope of their lives in their home environment," he said.
He stressed that compulsory military service does not mean there will be military training.
"There is no military training, so entering a military barracks is not a war exercise, no," he stressed.
"Helping to build their mental health, mental health and physical health, so that they become fit children, who don't drink, smoke, eximer, don't drink ciu," continued Dedi.
This website uses cookies.