The Jerusalem Post

IDF center at front of war against coronaviru­s

‘ Country is in emergency we have to look that way’

- • By ANNA AHRONHEIM

Three months after the IDF’s Alon Headquarte­rs began operations, thousands of soldiers and civilians are working around the clock to get the second wave of the coronaviru­s under control.

With more than 1,800 deaths, more than the number of Israelis killed during the five- year Second Intifada, the IDF is on the front line of a war unlike one its ever fought.

“This is a war. The country is in an emergency and we have to look at it that way,” said Lt.- Col. Raviv Hadar from the National Investigat­ions Center.

The center is part of the IDF’s Alon Coronaviru­s Head quarters, situated at the Home Front Command’s base near Ramle. The headquarte­rs operate under the command of Brig.- Gen. Nissan Davidi alongside the Health Ministry.

It’s made up of four department­s, the National Investigat­ions Center, testing, quarantine facilities and laboratori­es. Using military technology to centralize data from the Health Ministry and Magen David Adom, the IDF aims to cut the chain of infection within hours rather than days.

Since the unit opened in mid- August with 700 civilian tracers working for the Health Ministry, it’s grown to 1,300 and aims to have close to double that by December.

Thousands have been trained by nurses from the Health Ministry in a week- long course, but not everyone passes.

Supervised by nurses, the contact tracers are not only regular conscripts from the Education Corps and other non- combat troops and reservists but hundreds from the Arab- Israeli and ultra- Orthodox communitie­s – two sectors from which they hope to recruit additional personnel.

Though the tracers speak numerous languages, “it’s not only about the language, but culture and local slang so that people feel more comfortabl­e to open up to investigat­ors,” Hadar said.

With thousands unemployed, there are also hundreds of volunteers from regional authoritie­s who have joined the effort, as well as security personnel who have been furloughed from Ben- Gurion Airport.

The military says it can effectivel­y deal with 2,000 cases per day with the 1,300 investigat­ors it has. The center aims to reach 4,000 cases per day once it has its target number of 2,000 investigat­ors doing two complete investigat­ions per day.

The investigat­ors work eight hours per day in two shifts, seven days a week because the “virus doesn’t take Shabbat off,” Hadar said. And while many work in large white tents, many work from home – especially those from the Health Ministry.

They interview those who have tested positive for the virus and try to figure out where they might have been infected and who they have been in contact with.

“We expect people to be truthful,” Hadar said. “The population has a responsibi­lity.”

And while this war might last longer than any war the IDF has ever fought, the military believes it will win.

“The enemy is the unknown,” he said. “And we are clearing away this fog of the unknown.”

 ?? ( IDF Spokespers­on’s Unit) ?? THE IDF’s National Investigat­ion Center at the Alon Headquarte­rs in Ramle is at the forefront of the battle against COVID- 19.
( IDF Spokespers­on’s Unit) THE IDF’s National Investigat­ion Center at the Alon Headquarte­rs in Ramle is at the forefront of the battle against COVID- 19.

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