The Jerusalem Post

Coronaviru­s cabinet meeting ends with no new restrictio­ns

Travel to ‘banned’ countries subject to NIS 5,000 fine • Health Ministry Director-General Chezy Levy steps down

- • By MAAYAN HOFFMAN and ROSSELLA TERCATIN

The coronaviru­s cabinet met for several hours Sunday night but left without rolling out any new restrictio­ns on the public.

The cabinet instead decided that the goal at this stage is “maximum protection for Israeli citizens from the spread of the Delta strain, along with minimal harm to daily life,” while building infrastruc­ture to detect and treat COVID variants and other viruses in the future.

It was also determined that Coronaviru­s Commission­er Prof. Nachman Ash and Maj.Gen. (Res.) Roni Numa would formulate a recommenda­tion for enforcing isolation on those who return from abroad. It was also decided to promote a program for full genetic sequencing of all those entering the country through internatio­nal border crossings. more infectious than its British predecesso­r.

Although over the course of the past few days active cases in Israel have surged from fewer than 200 to almost 1,200, the number of serious cases has remained stable and on Sunday slightly declined. There were 114 new cases diagnosed on Saturday and another 63 between midnight and press time on Sunday.

There were 23 serious cases, down from 26 the day before.

There is currently only one

risen as dozens of young rightwing activists joined the community in solidarity to help prevent the IDF from razing it. On Sunday night, the Religious Zionist Youth put out an urgent message urging members to go to Evyatar fearing the imminent eviction.

Palestinia­ns from the nearby villages, primarily Beita, have also taken matters into their own hands and attempted to literally smoke out the residents. They have lit fires nearby that fill the air around the outpost with heavy black smoke that makes it difficult for Evyatar residents to breathe.

The IDF has said that the outpost’s creation has inflamed tensions and has forced it to divert forces needed elsewhere.

Former Kedumim Council head Daniella Weiss, who leads the Nahala movement said the opposite was the case.

The creations of Evyatar was the “appropriat­e Zionist answer to terror attacks,” she said.

Eyatar has become “a symbol of the will of Jews in the Land of Israel to hold onto the land to prevent the expansion of Arabs over government land [in Judea and Samaria],” Weiss said. • red city in Israel, two orange and five yellow.

“Our approach is simple,” Prime Minister Naftali Bennett said at a cabinet meeting Sunday morning. “Maximum protection for the citizens of Israel with minimum disruption to routine and the economy in Israel. Masks instead of restrictio­ns. Vaccinatio­ns instead of lockdowns.”

Bennett and Health Minister Nitzan Horowitz did not appear to want to slap any new widespread restrictio­ns on the country that would harm its economy. Rather, they wanted to convince 12- to 15-year-olds to get the jab, as well as those adults who have not yet been inoculated.

“The Delta variant, as it has been said, infects 50% more, but we know that the vaccine works,” Bennett said Sunday. “It simply works. People who can be vaccinated and are not doing so are simply putting themselves and those around them in danger.”

He called on young children to encourage their parents to sign them up to get inoculated.

“I especially appeal to young people,” Bennett said. “I know how much you want to relax this summer, and you can do so. I have four children of these ages. We do not want to impose any restrictio­ns – no parties, no trips, no nothing. However, it is precisely because of this, if you do not want restrictio­ns to be imposed on you, go today and get vaccinated. Talk to your parents and get vaccinated.”

According to the health funds, around 30% of teens between the ages of 12 and 16 have gotten vaccinated, and the country could reach as much as 50% of this age cohort within the coming days.

Ben-Gurion Airport has been Israel’s Achilles’ heel in the fight against the virus.

On Sunday, the government took several more steps to crack down on the airport complex, including approving a Health Ministry recommenda­tion to require all Israeli passengers over the age of 16 to fill out a declaratio­n before leaving Ben-Gurion Airport that they are not traveling to a “forbidden” country with high infection rates.

Airlines will be instructed not to allow passengers to board the plane without this declaratio­n.

The government also extended the regulation­s pertaining to traveling to and from banned

countries through July 11. In addition, leaving for one of these countries without special permission would be considered criminal and punishable with a NIS 5,000 fine.

The current list of banned countries includes Argentina, Brazil, India, Mexico, Russia and South Africa. Individual­s returning from these countries are required to enter isolation even if they are vaccinated.

The Health Ministry continues to recommend avoiding all unnecessar­y trips abroad, especially to countries under a travel warning.

On Sunday, two nations were added to this list, Belarus and Kyrgyzstan, while the Maldives and Nepal were removed from the group, which now includes Belarus, Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ethiopia, Kyrgyzstan, Namibia, Paraguay, Seychelles, Tunisia, Uganda, United Arab Emirates and Uruguay.

In addition, parents who prevent their minors from being screened for coronaviru­s on arrival at the airport will be subject to a NIS 3,500 fine.

Numa has been appointed special coronaviru­s airport commission­er, Bennett announced at the morning cabinet meeting.

“For a year and a half now, there has been a huge national weak point, and that is Ben-Gurion Airport,” Bennett said at the opening of the meeting. “Therefore, in coordinati­on with the transporta­tion minister, the health minister and the interior minister, we decided to appoint a special director to handle transition­s and prevent the entry of this virus and future variants and viruses from around the world into Israel.”

Numa already worked to coordinate the effort to defeat the pandemic in the haredi (ultra-Orthodox) sector, including in Bnei Brak.

Finally, ministers approved the issuing of a tender to set up an additional COVID-19 testing complex at the airport.

On Sunday, Health Ministry Director-General Chezy Levy announced his resignatio­n in a letter to Horowitz, who thanked him for “serving the country during one of the most challengin­g periods known to the Israeli health system.”

Levy began his position last June. He will return to his previous role as director-general of Barzilai Medical Center in Ashkelon.

An announceme­nt on the appointmen­t of the new director-general will be published soon, the Health Ministry said in a statement. •

Post. “We know how to stop the chain of infection. We know how to behave – what to do and what not to do. The hospitals are prepared.”

Moreover, there is a prime minister and a health minister who in their first weeks have already shown more transparen­cy than the previous government. As such, “the public will be more likely to cooperate” with their decisions, Rotstein added.

Israel is not in the same danger as it was at the beginning of the pandemic, said epidemiolo­gist Hagai Levine, but there is a danger of a massive outbreak. In that case, people will get infected, and some may even die.

There are currently around 350,000 Israelis who are either unvaccinat­ed or for whom the vaccine is not optimally effective for various reasons. Based on traditiona­l percentage­s, that would mean 50,000 patients in serious condition, according to Prof. Eli Waxman, who served on the National Security Council’s expert advisers committee

on the outbreak during the previous waves, when, if all 350,000 people had been infected, it would have caused up to 20% or 50,000 patients to be in serious condition.

While it can be assumed that not everyone falls ill, more likely only 10%-20%, “we don’t want to have thousands of severely ill people again,” Waxman said.

And because there are several uncertaint­ies, Israel must take swift and decisive, but measured, action to stop the spread of the virus.

In other words, Israel should not panic, but it should also not pretend as if everything is OK.

“Widespread infection of children is something we should avoid,” Waxman stressed.

While it is true that most children would only experience mild symptoms or less, there is evidence that a percentage would suffer long-term effects, such as long COVID or other complicati­ons.

“And we don’t know how infrequent or frequent this would be with the new variant,” Waxman said.

Also, widespread infection of children would inevitably reach the adults, as Israel already sees happening.

On Friday, Israel again rolled out the mandate to wear masks in closed spaces. On Sunday, Prime Minister Naftali Bennett announced the appointmen­t of Maj.-Gen. (res.) Roni Numa as special coronaviru­s airport commission­er.

The coronaviru­s cabinet was expected to announce a plan to limit the participat­ion of people who are not vaccinated in activities where large crowds are expected by re-institutin­g the green passport, although it decided against this measure.

It did discuss plans to ensure that the infrastruc­ture for cutting off infection chains – test, trace, isolate – is properly working.

The public can also do its part by getting vaccinated.

“People who can be vaccinated and are not doing so are simply putting themselves and those around them in danger,” Bennett said at the cabinet meeting on Sunday morning.

Health officials cannot say this current outbreak will continue growing. But they also cannot say it won’t.

Using masks and isolating costs little and could have a big impact.

“If we do these things in parallel, and we advance as much as possible the vaccinatio­n of children, then we will be able to contain this outbreak without any drastic measures,” Waxman said. “If we lose control, meaning the numbers rise to many hundreds a day, then this will not be sufficient, and we will be forced to take more severe action.” •

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