Israel tightens 2nd lockdown as coronavirus cases escalate
JERUSALEM — Israel on Thursdaymoved to further tighten its second countrywide lockdown as coronavirus cases continued to soar, ordering all nonessential businesses to close and requiring people to stay within 1,100 yards of their homes.
Prayers during the ongoing High Holidays, as well as political demonstrations, would be limited toopenspacesandnomore than 20people, andparticipants would have to remain within the restricted distance from home.
The measures are set to go into force Friday afternoon, as the country shuts down for the weekly Sabbath ahead of the solemn holy day of YomKippur on Sunday and Monday. Even during normal times, Israel completely shuts down for Yom Kippur, the Jewish Day of Atonement, with businesses and airports closed, roads empty, and even radio and television stations going silent.
In a televised address Thursday night, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu acknowledged the pain causedby the closings, but said the holiday season, when many businesses slowdown in any case, was the best time to take action.
Comparing the situation to a war, he said the measures would save lives. “Wake up. Enough is enough. We are in a new reality,” he said.
The limits on both prayers and protests could spark a backlash.
Israel’s politically influential ultra- Orthodox community has objected to limitsonpublic prayer during the High Holidays, and Netanyahu opponents have accused him of using the lockdown as a cover to end weekly demonstrations against his handling of the crisis.
Netanyahu dismissed such allegations as “absurd,“saying all of the restrictionswere for public safety.
In a separate address, Netanyahu’s former rival and now governing partner, Benny Gantz, called for national unity.
“We cannot allow anyone to exploit and deepen polarization and make us lose this battle,” he said, vowing that protesters could take to the streets and worshippers could fill synagogues once the situation is brought under control.
“Saving lives comes before anything else. Anything at all,” Gantz said in a speech outside his home.
The government ordered synagogues to close for the lockdown, which is expected to last for at least two weeks, but said they could open with limitations for prayers on Yom Kippur, the holiest day in the Jewish calendar.
Hagai Levine, a professor of epidemiology and a member of an expert panel advising the government, warned that allowing Yom Kippur prayers in synagogues could lead to mass transmission.
He went so far as to compare it to the 1973 war, when Egypt and Syria launched a surprise attack on Israel during Yom Kippur.
“Now, it’s no surprise. We are going to have a massive problem and massive transmission on Yom Kippur in a few days,” he said.
Israel is reporting nearly 7,000 new daily cases ecently, making the outbreak in the country of 9 million people among the worst in theworld on a per capita basis.