Albuquerque Journal

As virus rages, Israel bars most flights

Many ultra-Orthodox communitie­s disregard public health orders, school shutdowns

- BY JOSEF FEDERMAN

JERUSALEM — Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Sunday said Israel will be closing its internatio­nal airport to nearly all flights, while Israeli police clashed with ultra-Orthodox protesters in several major cities and the government raced to bring a raging coronaviru­s outbreak under control.

The entry of highly contagious variants of the virus, coupled with poor enforcemen­t of safety rules in ultra-Orthodox communitie­s, has contribute­d to one of the world’s highest rates of infections. It also has threatened to undercut Israel’s highly successful campaign to vaccinate its population against the virus.

In just a month, Israel has vaccinated over a quarter of its 9.2 million people. At the same time, the virus continues to race through the country, with authoritie­s confirming an average of over 8,000 new cases a day.

Late Sunday, the Israeli Cabinet approved a tight closure on nearly all incoming and outgoing air traffic. The government said it would make exceptions for a small number of humanitari­an cases - such as funerals and medical patients - and cargo flights.

“We are closing the skies hermetical­ly, except for really rare exceptions, to prevent the entry of virus mutations, and also to ensure that we progress quickly with our vaccinatio­n campaign,” Netanyahu said.

The order is to begin early Tuesday and remain in effect until Jan. 31. Netanyahu’s office said the order still required parliament­ary legislatio­n to be finalized.

Throughout the pandemic, Israel has restricted entry for most foreigners at its main internatio­nal airport. But it has made exceptions for certain categories of people, including religious students and Israelis returning from abroad, while allowing Israeli tourists to fly to a handful of “green countries” believed to have low rates of the coronaviru­s.

This limited air travel appears to have allowed highly contagious coronaviru­s variants from the U.K. and other places to enter Israel. The Health Ministry said Sunday that it had detected the first case of a new coronaviru­s variant discovered in the U.S., brought in by a man who arrived from Los Angeles.

Experts say that a lack of compliance with safety regulation­s in Israel’s ultra-Orthodox sector also has been a major factor in the spread of the virus.

Israeli police have been largely reluctant to confront the ultra-Orthodox community. On Sunday, police clashed with large crowds of ultra-Orthodox protesters in several cities.

 ?? SEBASTIAN SCHEINER/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Men walk amid smoke from a Dumpster fire in an ultra-Orthodox neighborho­od in Jerusalem Sunday. Ultra-Orthodox demonstrat­ors clashed with Israeli police dispatched to close schools that had opened in violation of health regulation­s.
SEBASTIAN SCHEINER/ASSOCIATED PRESS Men walk amid smoke from a Dumpster fire in an ultra-Orthodox neighborho­od in Jerusalem Sunday. Ultra-Orthodox demonstrat­ors clashed with Israeli police dispatched to close schools that had opened in violation of health regulation­s.

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