The Jerusalem Post

Horowitz: Government not considerin­g closing airport

Bennett to ask cabinet to bring back Green Pass

- • By ROSSELLA TERCATIN and MAAYAN HOFFMAN

The authoritie­s are not thinking of closing the airport, Health Minister Nitzan Horowitz told the Knesset plenum on Monday.

“We are not closing the airport, and we are not considerin­g closing the airport,” he said.

On Sunday, media suggested that health officials were discussing whether to recommend the move to the cabinet, together with other possible measures to limit traveling, as tens of thousands of citizens are flying abroad, despite the spike in cases due to the Delta variant in several parts of the world.

Horowitz said that lately, about 100 new cases enter the country every day through Ben-Gurion Airport, despite the fact that all passengers are required to present a negative

PCR test before they board the plane.

He stressed that the government is focusing on tests and enforcemen­t of isolation to prevent the virus and potentiall­y new variants from spreading in Israel through returnees from abroad, noting that keeping the airport open is part of “living under the coronaviru­s routine. Maximum protection through vaccinatio­n, masks and all the tools that we have [at our

disposal] but with minimum harm.”

Speaking at a press briefing, Health Ministry Director-General Prof. Nachman Ash also confirmed that, at the moment, closing the airport is not an option under considerat­ion.

However, he emphasized again that Israelis should refrain from unessentia­l travel, warning that the list of countries under travel ban or severe travel warning might be further expanded. In both cases all returnees have to quarantine; Israelis are prohibited from visiting banned countries unless they obtain permission from the dedicated special government­al committee. Those lists include some popular destinatio­ns, such as Spain, the UK, Turkey and Cyprus.

On Monday night, Channel 12 reported that health profession­als are going to recommend to the coronaviru­s cabinet to require all travelers to isolate regardless of their country of origin or immunizati­on status.

The cabinet is expected to meet on Wednesday.

EARLIER IN the day, Horowitz met with Economy Minister Orna Barbivay and Culture and Sport Minister Chili Tropper, and announced that he and Prime Minister Naftali Bennett are going to ask the ministers to approve bringing back the Green Pass system for all gatherings with over 100 participan­ts.

Until the end of May, a

Green Pass was granted to all individual­s who were fully vaccinated, recovered or holders of a negative coronaviru­s test performed in the previous 72 hours. Access to several venues and activities – including indoor restaurant­s, gyms and performanc­es – was limited to green pass holders.

The Health Ministry had already recommende­d re-adopting the system for large gatherings last week, but the cabinet did not approve it.

Starting from Wednesday, a new “Happy Badge” system will come into effect for indoor weddings and similar events, requiring a vaccinatio­n/recovery certificat­e or a negative test in order to attend them. However, in light of the spike in cases, Bennett and Horowitz agree with the assessment by health experts that this move is not going to be enough.

In the upcoming days, the relevant ministers will meet with representa­tives of the industries to which the green pass is expected to apply.

Horowitz stressed that, at the moment, there is no intention of capping the number of people who can attend an event.

At the beginning of the government’s meeting on Monday, Bennett spoke about the COVID-19 outbreak.

“I want to say it here clearly: The government decisions are not recommenda­tions – they are binding: Whoever breaks them will pay,” he said, reminding the public that wearing a mask indoors, observing quarantine rules and respecting Happy Badge regulation­s is compulsory.

Bennett vowed that the government is working on a plan to lead Israel through the crisis in the upcoming weeks up until the beginning of the school year, and that there

will not be decisions made and implemente­d at the last minute.

THE SCHOOL year will open according to routine in line with the government plans, said Horowitz. “Last year, Israel’s children were home more than in any other Western country,” the minister stressed. “We do not want this to happen again.”

The Education Ministry is evaluating plan for next year, as well as a system in which a child who becomes infected would go to isolation but not his entire class, The Jerusalem Post confirmed. Rather, anyone who was near the sick child would be administer­ed a rapid test. Students who test negative could return to school.

It is unclear if the same rules would apply in red cities, specifical­ly whether school would be held in full in red cities, where in previous waves older kids learned online.

A source in the education ministry stressed, however, that while this is the direction of the plan, nothing has been approved yet and the public will be made aware when a final outline is establishe­d.

Horowitz also said any plan would be based on regular testing.

Some 829 new cases were registered on Sunday, with about 50,000 tests processed. As of 6 p.m. on Monday, another 915 cases were registered, suggesting the country would see another record in the current outbreak. After Friday, the number surpassed 1,100 out of 75,000 tests.

Meanwhile, the increase indicates limited serious morbidity. As of Monday, there were 60 patients in serious condition, six fewer than 24 hours earlier. Four weeks earlier there were 21 serious patients. At the same, three people succumbed to the virus on Sunday. The number of victims in July is

already more than double that of June.

According to Ash, within two weeks Israel could see as many as 2,000 new daily cases, as well as 30 new serious patients a day shortly thereafter. •

 ??  ?? TRAVELERS SEEN in the departure hall at Ben-Gurion Airport yesterday. (Avshalom Sassoni/Flash90)
TRAVELERS SEEN in the departure hall at Ben-Gurion Airport yesterday. (Avshalom Sassoni/Flash90)
 ??  ?? BEN & JERRY’S ice creams on sale at a shop in Jerusalem yesterday. (Yonatan Sindel/Flash90)
BEN & JERRY’S ice creams on sale at a shop in Jerusalem yesterday. (Yonatan Sindel/Flash90)

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