The Jerusalem Post

No lockdown easing before Sunday, cabinet agrees

Gamzu ‘ greatly concerned’ over level of infection

- • By MAAYAN HOFFMAN

Israel will remain in a state of lockdown until Sunday at midnight the coronaviru­s cabinet agreed on Tuesday night.

A debate over the continued lockdown and the exit date broke out at the coronaviru­s cabinet which met late into the night on Tuesday to discuss the first stages of Israel’s planned exit strategy. Already before the cabinet convened, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu decided that a final decision would be made on Thursday.

At the heart of the debate is the reopening of small businesses and preschools. Finance Minister Israel Katz sided with Blue and White on Tuesday and called for the reopening of businesses. Alternate Prime Minister Benny Gantz first called for the restrictio­ns to be lifted no later than Friday, while Netanyahu pushed for an extension of the lockdown through Monday at midnight.

Gantz and Netanyahu held a private call to resolve their difference­s.

“Small businesses are collapsing,” Katz said, adding that children needed to go back to their routines. “Opening them does not hurt health and adds much to the economy.”

Business owners took to the streets on Tuesday in protest of the lockdown, with many threatenin­g that if the closure isn’t lifted soon, they would open anyway.

Netanyahu said that if the country opens before the infection rate hits the Health Ministry’s limit for release, it will appear that there are “loopholes in the closure and our decisions will go down the drain... We didn’t reach the goal of 2,000 new cases per day, so we have to wait until Thursday” to decide.

[ The ministers were still meeting at press time. For the latest on the meeting, visit Jpost. com.]

The cabinet meeting, initially scheduled to start in the afternoon, was delayed by several hours after Health Minister Yuli Edelstein stressed that the morbidity rate was still too high to make practical decisions.

“Prof. [ Ronni] Gamzu expressed great concern that despite the closure, 3,000 people were infected in a single day,” a statement by the ministry and the Prime Minister’s Office ( PMO) said.

Later, at the cabinet meeting, Edelstein said, “It is difficult to understand the morbidity trend and to assess what happened during the holidays in the red cities. Only in four weeks will we really know what the level of morbidity really is.”

Nonetheles­s, after pushback from Gantz, Katz and others, the meeting commenced. A statement from the PMO stressed that the meeting was meant solely to discuss the stages of the exit strategy and their approval – not to lift the closure.

The infection rate continued to decline on Tuesday. The Health Ministry reported 3,112 new positive cases on Monday, 5% of those screened. Some 802 patients were in serious condition on Tuesday evening and the Health Ministry reported a total of 2,040 dead.

A report by the Military Intelligen­ce’s Coronaviru­s National Informatio­n and Knowledge Center released on Tuesday showed that the average daily infection rate remained higher than what could allow Israel to effectivel­y cut the infection chain.

If the decline in morbidity continues at the current rate, the report said, within two weeks the number of daily infections will cut in half, to around 1,500.

In a sign of the partial success of the lockdown, Health Ministry deputy director- general Itamar Grotto told the Knesset coronaviru­s committee meeting that when the

closure began, there were 200 red cities and that today there are only 26.

“The success of the closure has resulted in us having good morbidity indices,” Grotto said. “We are not yet at the number that allows us to start the first phase of the opening, but if it continues at the current pace, there is no reason why we should not reach the index we want and to start opening on Sunday.”

The first stage of the Health Ministry’s exit strategy is expected to include lifting the 1,000- meter travel restrictio­n, allowing private businesses that do not serve customers face- to- face to operate, opening preschools for children ages newborn through six, allowing family members to visit one another in their homes, allowing takeaway from restaurant­s and reopening beaches and nature reserves.

The National Student and Youth Council called on the government to “put students at the top of the list of priorities” and accused it of putting malls before “a million abandoned teenage boys and girls.”

The council was backed by data published by the Education Ministry which showed that in 94% of preschools there were no infections; in 54% of primary schools there were no infections; and in close to 45% of middle and high schools there were no infections.

According to the ministry’s exit plan, older grades would open sometime in December or January.

“You are abandoning an entire generation from your air- conditione­d offices and ruining its future because of the economic interests of pressure groups,” the council said.

Gamzu is expected to present a list of red cities at the cabinet meeting later this week and it is likely that many will be ultra- Orthodox, since the morbidity rate there is higher than the rest of the country. Haredi politician­s have said that they will fight any initiative to differenti­ate between red and green cities.

The full list of cities is not known, but is likely to include Ashdod, Beitar Illit, Beit Shemesh, Bnei Brak, Kiryat Malachi, Netivot, Ofakim, Or Yehudah and Ramle. During a visit with the mayor of Jerusalem on Tuesday, Gamzu said that there were only two red neighborho­ods in the city: Ramat Shlomo and Neveh Ya’acov.

Media reports claimed that the government was in agreement about opening Ben- Gurion Airport during any first stage of an exit strategy – first for business travel and then for tourism. At the meeting, Attorney- General Avichai Mandelblit said that the airports could only open when the 1,000- meter travel restrictio­n was lifted, since otherwise it would be almost impossible to enforce it.

Knesset Coronaviru­s Committee Chairwoman MK Yifat Shasha- Biton opened the discussion by asking participan­ts to focus on the plan, but to also take into account the repercussi­ons of the current closure.

“We have to look at the number of unemployed, how many people have gone bankrupt, and domestic violence,” she said. “We are losing an entire generation of children here – those children who have not been to school regularly for some time. We know the virus will stay here for at least another year and we will not shut people in their homes for a year.”

Shasha- Biton said that “society has crashed” and that the country must learn to build a livable routine alongside the virus.

“We hear more and more people, out of great distress, threatenin­g to break the closure,” she said. “We have lost public trust. To prevent anarchy, we need to talk to the public with logic and transparen­cy.” •

 ?? ( Marc Israel Sellem/ The Jerusalem Post) ?? CORONAVIRU­S COMMISSION­ER Prof. Ronni Gamzu is seen during a meeting at the Jerusalem Municipali­ty yesterday.
( Marc Israel Sellem/ The Jerusalem Post) CORONAVIRU­S COMMISSION­ER Prof. Ronni Gamzu is seen during a meeting at the Jerusalem Municipali­ty yesterday.

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