The Jerusalem Post

Government orders stricter enforcemen­t of isolation to prevent new COVID outbreaks

- • By ROSSELLA TERCATIN and MAAYAN HOFFMAN

Prime Minister Naftali Bennett, Health Minister Nitzan Horowitz and other relevant officials and experts, including transporta­tion, interior and education ministers met Sunday night to decide on new measures to address the risk of increased morbidity following a number of coronaviru­s outbreaks at several Israeli schools.

They agreed to task some additional 250 police officers to enforce isolation requiremen­ts for those returning from abroad, build a new testing complex at Ben-Gurion Airport and increase the number of testing stations, as well as carry out

a communicat­ion campaign to foster awareness of the importance of respecting quarantine regulation­s among the public.

In addition, the authoritie­s will investigat­e the gap between the number of violations of

quarantine and the fines given, and will consider the position of parents whose unvaccinat­ed children do not quarantine after returning from abroad.

The ministers also confirmed that Israelis are not going to be allowed to fly to countries under travel ban – Argentina, Brazil, India, Mexico, Russia and South Africa, unless they obtain a special permission from the dedicated government committee.

A further meeting to discuss the issues related to the coronaviru­s will be scheduled in the next few days.

Earlier in the day, a spokespers­on for the ministry said that Horowitz and coronaviru­s commission­er Nachman Ash were working to accelerate the implementa­tion of a plan compelling incoming travelers required to isolate to wear an electronic bracelet to monitor their compliance. The program was first approved in March and has stalled since then.

In the past few days, several outbreaks have occurred in schools all over the country,

prompting the ministry to order students in three cities to wear masks and to consider issuing a stronger recommenda­tion to get children ages 12-15 to get inoculated.

At least a dozen teachers at a special needs school in the Sharon region tested positive for coronaviru­s, including 10 who were vaccinated, The Jerusalem Post has learned.

According to a teacher at the school and a series of WhatsApps between the teacher and other educationa­l profession­als that the Post reviewed, the outbreak began with one teacher on Wednesday; a handful more were diagnosed on Thursday and several more over the weekend.

“Almost everyone went to get checked, even if they were feeling OK,” the teacher, who asked to be known only as Eran, told the Post.

It is still unclear how many students are infected, though he said that some of the sick are definitely youths.

The school has fewer than 200 students coming from all over

Israel, as well as staff from around the country.

Eran said that none of the staff had been abroad, but he did not know if any of their family members, friends or inner circle had traveled.

Eran sent a message to the school in Petah Tikva where his children are enrolled, to inform them of the situation. The principal has decided to require all students to wear masks for the time being, including in open spaces, according to a WhatsApp communicat­ion seen by the Post.

The Post asked the Health Ministry for additional details, but did not receive a response.

On Saturday, the ministry announced that several coronaviru­s cases had been discovered in a school in Binyamina. After some 45 students tested positive, the ministry ordered on Sunday that masks must be worn in schools in Binyamina, Modi’in and Maccabim-Re’ut.

The fresh mandate instructed students to wear masks on all school property, including in open areas.

Only nine of the students who tested positive were reported to have been experienci­ng any coronaviru­s symptoms.

According to initial ministry findings, the source of the outbreak is still under investigat­ion, but there is a connection with a family who recently returned to Israel from abroad.

The preliminar­y results of the genetic sequencing suggest that the children are infected with the Delta variant (commonly known as the Indian variant), which experts believe is significan­tly more contagious than the British strain that is currently dominant in the country.

Earlier last week, another outbreak was reported in a school in Modi’in, with some 15 students infected.

Another two students tested positive for the virus in Kibbutz Ashdot Ya’acov Ihud in the Jordan Valley, after their father returned from Dubai, according to N12. As a result, classes in the school were canceled.

Several hundred students have been sent to home isolation as a result of the outbreaks.

The Health Ministry is considerin­g changing the recommenda­tion for vaccinatin­g youth aged 12 to 15. A spokeswoma­n for Ash told the Post that “We may move to a stronger recommenda­tion for children.”

On Sunday, the Clalit health fund reported a nearly 100% increase in requests for coronaviru­s vaccinatio­n by students in this age cohort.

Earlier in the day, the Health Ministry asked vaccinated and recovered people who attended a performanc­e in Beit Shean’s Qimron Hall on Thursday to enter quarantine after it discovered that a girl in the audience tested positive for the coronaviru­s on Sunday morning. However, later on Sunday, the ministry said that only people who are not vaccinated or recovered should isolate, while those who are should get tested and avoid contact with people until they receive the results. •

 ?? (Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post) ?? CUSTOMERS SHOP in Hadar Mall in Jerusalem last week on the first day that no masks were required.
(Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post) CUSTOMERS SHOP in Hadar Mall in Jerusalem last week on the first day that no masks were required.

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