EJP

Israel approves stricter lockdown measures to curb sharp rise in COVID-19 morbidity

The lockdown is to go into effect this Friday 25 September at 2 p.m. and last for at least three weeks.

The closure is to go into effect on Friday at 2 p.m. and last for at least three weeks. Most businesses will be closed, prayers and public protests restricted, and outgoing flights will be canceled.

By JNS

Following a fiery eight-hour session on Wednesday evening, Israel’s coronavirus Cabinet finally agreed upon the terms of the nationwide lockdown scheduled to go into effect on Friday at 2 p.m. and last for at least two weeks, until the end of the Jewish High Holidays.

This new set of regulations geared at halting and reducing the country’s sharply rising COVID-19 morbidity and mortality rates comes on the heels of a more lenient lockdown that had been imposed last Friday, the eve of Rosh Hashanah, at the same hour. The first countrywide lockdown was in April.

According to a joint statement released on Thursday morning by the Prime Minister’s Office and Health Ministry, the complete list of regulations and forced closures, pending Cabinet approval, will be:

In his opening remarks to ministers at Wednesday night’s Cabinet meeting, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said: “[W]e are called upon to make decisions, and leadership means making tough decisions, the necessary decisions, the decisions that save lives. We do not have the privilege of knowing that we could have prevented additional mortality and did not do so. This is our responsibility. As elected representatives, we must act now, and I tell you, act together, for the citizens of Israel.”

As of Thursday afternoon, the Health Ministry had recorded 206,332 total confirmed cases, 56,901 of which are currently active. Of those, 667 patients were listed as being in serious condition, 164 on ventilators. To date, 1,335 people have died of the disease.

However, a number of issues remain unclear, among them which types of work are defined as “essential,” what the directives will be for synagogues on Yom Kippur and whether those who have already purchased airline tickets will be allowed to fly or not.

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