The Jerusalem Post

Israeli forces prepare for nationwide lockdown

- • By ANNA AHRONHEIM and MAAYAN HOFFMAN

As the number of Israelis with the novel coronaviru­s continues to climb, the defense establishm­ent is preparing for a nationwide lockdown in which soldiers will work with police to enforce it.

While no order has been given to the military, if it happens, eight battalions of unarmed troops from training bases will accompany the police, IDF Spokespers­on

Brig.-Gen. Hidai Zilberman said.

The soldiers are undergoing training to act as an auxiliary force to the Israel Police, which has legal authority to enforce the lockdown.

The Public Security Ministry has asked the IDF to provide 16 battalions, Kol Yisrael reported on Sunday. Each police district would be assisted by two IDF battalions, which would enforce the lockdown as well

as assist in supplying essential equipment, it said. The military later clarified that each police district would have one battalion, and additional troops would be available if necessary.

The number of individual­s diagnosed with the virus climbed to 1,930 cases by Tuesday night. According to the Health Ministry, while the large majority of cases are mild, 34 people are in serious condition and three people have died. Another 53 people have recovered from the virus.

Since the coronaviru­s outbreak last month, some 135,549 Israelis have self-isolated at home for a period of 14 days after returning from overseas or being exposed to the virus. There reportedly are 71,029 citizens in isolation.

Twenty-three soldiers are sick with coronaviru­s, and one recovered, Zilberman said. Another 5,600 soldiers and civilian employees of the IDF are in quarantine, including 240 lone soldiers who are being housed at a military resort facility in Givat Olga. The military will be opening another quarantine facility for lone soldiers at Beit Hahayal in Kiryat Shmona, Ynet reported.

Fewer soldiers are in quarantine because many of them who returned from abroad finished their isolation period and were released after they were not found to have contracted the virus, Zilberman said.

“The police will be ready to keep Israelis in their homes if that is what the government and the Health Ministry decide,” said Yishai Shalem, head of the Israel Police Operationa­l Department.

“It’s not so complicate­d,” he told The Jerusalem Post on Monday, the same day Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu took part in a seven-hour meeting with senior officials to determine what new guidelines might be required to help slow the spread of coronaviru­s.

“We have a state-of-emergency plan in place, and if there is a decision to do it and we are required to move forward, we can and will,” Shalem said.

Earlier this week, Police Acting Insp.-Gen. Moti Cohen revealed some details of the plan. It would involve dividing the country into quadrants, each headed by a captain and team of police officers and soldiers, who would monitor borders and movement and enforce the lockdown. Hundreds

of police officers would be deployed to villages, towns and cities and be stationed alongside soldiers, he said.

“We know how many officers we need near Jerusalem, between Jerusalem and Beit Shemesh and on the roads linking Ramle and Lod,” Cohen said. “There is a plan for every district.”

Shalem said barriers would block city boundaries, and people would be stopped on the street and asked for their IDs and addresses. But this would take place only if the most extreme plans are rolled out, he said, in which case only groceries and pharmacies would be open, and people could only go to them or be outside within a few meters of their homes.

The police have never seen anything like this before and were basing their plans on what other countries have done in the past and now, including China, Italy, Germany and the United States, Shalem said.

“It’s not a military state” though, he said. “We want the public to participat­e. If they act well, then we will not need to intervene.”

The police already have played a prominent role in enforcing quarantine and closure orders.

The police have opened 135 investigat­ions against individual­s who broke quarantine and 23 against those who published fake news about the virus, they reported Tuesday. They also closed 54 businesses for not adhering to the regulation­s. Moreover, police have checked 25,700 people to confirm that they are in quarantine.

Overnight early on Tuesday, Haifa police arrested a man for causing damage to the newly opened Magen David Adom coronaviru­s testing complex. He also stole a computer from the center.

The police have been given access to enough data about Israeli citizens to “know how to check if people are in isolation,” Shalem said. “We know who came back from abroad and who needs to be in isolation. We call them first to see if they are in isolation. If we don’t think so, we visit their homes.”

“We know how to patrol the streets, check that businesses are closed and make sure restaurant­s are only serving takeaway,” he said.

Most of the public is following the Health Ministry directives, but some sectors have been more recalcitra­nt, Shalem said. He did not elaborate. But if and when a total lockdown is implemente­d, those sectors would be compelled to cooperate, he added.

“This is really just to protect the public’s health,” Shalem said. “We are here for the safety of the public.” •

 ?? (Yonatan Sindel/Flash90) ?? JERUSALEM MUNICIPALI­TY inspectors close the entrance to Mahaneh Yehuda yesterday.
(Yonatan Sindel/Flash90) JERUSALEM MUNICIPALI­TY inspectors close the entrance to Mahaneh Yehuda yesterday.

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