From the BBC:
“Coronavirus: Israel to impose
three-week national lockdown”
Israel is to impose a new
national lockdown to contain the spread of coronavirus - with tough
restrictions coming into effect on Jewish new year. The country's second
lockdown begins on Friday and lasts at least three weeks. Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu said the measures would "exact a heavy price on us
all", but the country faced a surge with 4,000 new daily infections. A
minister has resigned to protest against the restrictions that overlap with
important Jewish festivals. Housing Minister Yaakov Litzman, who leads an
ultra-Orthodox Jewish party, said the measures would prevent Jewish people from
celebrating their religious festivals, including Yom Kippur, the holiest day of
the Jewish calendar, on 27 September. He also threatened to pull his party out
of the governing coalition. The country has seen 1,108 deaths from Covid-19 and
more than 153,000 confirmed infections, according to a global tally kept by US
university Johns Hopkins.
What are the new restrictions?
Israel, which has a population of about nine million, has reported more
than 3,000 new cases a day in recent weeks. In a televised address on
Sunday, the prime minister said this had grown to 4,000 daily. The
measures he announced will be the most extensive imposed in Israel since the
first lockdown, which ran from late March until early May, and include:
No more than 10 people can meet
indoors while groups of 20 are allowed outdoors
Schools and shopping centres will
close, and Israelis must stay within 500 metres of their homes with the
exception of travelling to workplaces
Non-governmental offices and
businesses can stay open but must not accept customers
However supermarkets and
pharmacies can remain open to the public.
Mr Netanyahu acknowledged the
disruption the lockdown would cause to Jewish communities celebrating religious
holidays that normally see families come together. "This is not the kind
of holiday we are used to. And we certainly won't be able to celebrate with our
extended families," he said. The restrictions on indoor gatherings will
severely impact prayers in synagogues. The
second lockdown will cost the economy, which is in recession due to the
pandemic, an estimated 6.5bn shekels ($1.88bn), the finance ministry says.
What did Yaakov Litzman say? Mr
Litzman said in his resignation letter on Friday: "This wrongs and scorns
hundreds of thousands of citizens. "Where were you until now? Why
have the Jewish holidays become a convenient address for tackling the
coronavirus?" Interior Minister Aryeh Deri - who leads another
ultra-Orthodox party - said in a video posted on Twitter that he supported the
planned restrictions, and that not abiding by them would be tantamount to
murder. Addressing the cabinet as it convened to vote on the lockdown on
Sunday, Mr Netanyahu said he regretted Mr Litzman's resignation. He
added: "We have to move on, to make the decisions necessary for Israel in
the coronavirus era, and that is what we will do in this session." Mr
Netanyahu has faced criticism for his handling of the outbreak. Critics say his
failure to tackle the virus effectively has led to another national lockdown.
Many nations are experiencing second surges of the virus. However most
governments are now imposing smaller local lockdowns in affected areas, rather
than blanket national ones.
^ It is sad that Israel is being
placed on a 2nd National Lockdown – especially over the Jewish New
Year – but hopefully it will help stop the spread of Covid-19 there. ^
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