The Jerusalem Post

PM weighs increased restrictio­ns as coronaviru­s cases climb to 3,419

Deaths rise to 12 • Haredim lead surge in new incidences • 1,300 fined

- • By MAAYAN HOFFMAN and EYTAN HALON

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu ordered authoritie­s over the weekend to prepare to significan­tly tighten restrictio­ns on movement starting Sunday, aiming to further reduce the number of people leaving their homes and, to hopefully, contain the spread of the novel coronaviru­s pandemic.

Should there not be a change in the trend of infections over the weekend, Netanyahu warned, a full shutdown of the country will be necessary. The warning followed a meeting with ministers and ministry director-generals, during which the Finance Ministry was tasked with developing a plan for a further reduction of the country’s labor force.

The prime minister also ordered stepped up enforcemen­t in supermarke­ts and pharmacies to ensure the Health Ministry’s directives regarding crowding are adhered to.

However, according to Health Ministry officials, as of Saturday there was slower than expected growth in the number of infections: Some 3,619 Israelis have been diagnosed with coronaviru­s - an increase of 926 cases during the weekend. Twelve individual­s have died to date all elderly individual­s with underlying health conditions. Among the confirmed cases, 54 are in serious condition, including 43 intubated individual­s. So far, 89 individual­s have recovered.

An 82-year-old Shmuel Safri from man, Haifa, who was vacationin­g in Italy also died of coronaviru­s, the Foreign Ministry said on Saturday. The Israeli consul in Rome, Eitan Avraham, is assisting the family following the man’s death.

The greatest challenge seems to be within the haredi (ultra-Orthodox) neighborho­ods where the numbers per 10,000 people are among the highest: 53 in Kiryat Ye’arim, 38 in Kfar Chabad and 13 in Bnei Brak, in comparison to four in Tel Aviv and 1.5 in Haifa.

“What is happening in Bnei Brak is like Italy,” one doctor from a major hospital in central Israel told Channel 12. “Almost every haredi who is tested for the virus is found positive. There are families with 100% infection. The Health Ministry needs to go door to door, and take the sick from their homes. If not, in another few weeks, we will see them coming in by masses.”

In an interview with the television channel, Health Ministry director-general Moshe Bar Siman Tov explained that behavioral changes had been noted in both the haredi and Arab neighborho­ods, but that “the potential for infection is greater in places with greater population density.”

Highlighti­ng the difficulty for effective isolation within

high-density areas and large families, Bar Siman Tov said ministers had agreed to open dedicated isolation centers for both haredi and Arab individual­s.

Netanyahu’s proclamati­on came on the backdrop of an announceme­nt by the Health Ministry that it will increase the number of people it tests for coronaviru­s to 30,000 per day within a month. On Friday, some 6,000 tests were taken, and that number is expected to increase to 10,000 by mid-week, a decision that Defense Minister Naftali Bennett called “tremendous news.”

Due to a technical problem, however, the Health Ministry said test results from the country’s 27 laboratori­es were delayed on Saturday.

Morris Dorfman, head of regulation at the Digital Health and Informatio­n Systems Directorat­e at the Health Ministry, said that the results of eight tests were reported incorrectl­y by two laboratori­es to the ministry. The results had not yet been transferre­d to the patients in question, he said, and operations at the laboratori­es were continuing as normal.

As the number of confirmed cases and deaths from the pandemic continue to soar worldwide, including a death toll exceeding 10,000 in Italy, Netanyahu spoke on the phone with Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte. Netanyahu sent condolence­s in the name of the Israeli government over the more than 10,000 deaths in the country. Netanyahu was set to convene a meeting with finance officials late on Saturday to finalize a delayed plan to support the economy and businesses struggling as a result of measures to contain the coronaviru­s.

On Saturday evening, Netanyahu is set to convene a meeting with finance officials to finalize a delayed plan to support the economy

and businesses struggling as a result of measures to contain the coronaviru­s.

The scope of the financial aid package requested by Netanyahu is set to be about NIS 80 billion, or 6% of GDP, including increased government-backed loans, deferred compulsory business payments and deferred taxation. It was also decided to include an NIS 5b. fund to bail out large businesses.

The plan, which will likely be presented for approval at Sunday’s cabinet meeting, will be in addition to NIS 8b. in support already allocated to businesses, primarily in the form of low-interest, government-backed loans.

On Friday, the government approved a series of emergency financial support regulation­s, including the provision of unemployme­nt benefits for citizens over the age of 67 – estimated to stand at some 135,000 individual­s. Individual­s will receive up to NIS 4,000 if they were forced to leave work due to the outbreak.

“This is a significan­t and unpreceden­ted step that shows the ongoing assistance of elderly citizens, especially those in the employment sector over retirement age,” Labor Minister Ofir Akunis said.

Among the latest casualties of the coronaviru­s was a 73-year-old man from Haifa with underlying conditions. His wife, 71, remains hospitaliz­ed at Haifa’s Rambam Medical Center with coronaviru­s.

A 93-year-old man hospitaliz­ed at Soroka Medical Center, an 80-year-old man admitted to Wolfson Hospital and a 76-year-old woman treated at Rabin Medical Center also died over the weekend.

As of Saturday afternoon, police said they had issued 1,296 fines to date to individual­s and businesses for defying Health Ministry directives.

A total of 849 fines between NIS 500 and 5,000 were issued for prohibited activities in public; 152 fines for being present in a banned location; 108 for refusing to disperse from crowded locations;

105 for operating a forbidden business; and 73 for defying self-isolation orders.

Idan Zonshine contribute­d to this report. •

ISRAEL HAS also allowed the movement and access of “personnel involved in the COVID-19 response to and

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