Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Netanyahu cautions against relaxing COVID-19 restrictions

Despite data indicating a decline in Israel’s coronavirus morbidity, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says at least 10 more days are needed before the situation can be reassessed.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu holds a press conference at the Prime Minister’s Office in Jerusalem on March 12, 2020. Photo by Alex Kolomoisky/POOL.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu holds a press conference at the Prime Minister’s Office in Jerusalem on March 12, 2020. Photo by Alex Kolomoisky/POOL.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Sunday that despite indications that Israel’s COVID-19 morbidity rate may be declining, at least 10 more days of lockdown were necessary to validate the trend.

“Now, there are those who are already saying that they are ‘cautiously optimistic’ that the lockdown is already starting to work, to ‘flatten the growth curve.’ I am more cautious than the cautious. I want to wait until at least 10 [more] days have passed,” he said.

According to Israeli Health Ministry data, of the 24,729 COVID-19 tests conducted on Sunday, 11.7 percent were positive, slightly up from Saturday’s figure, but still part of an overall downward trend during the past week. On Monday morning, there were 878 seriously ill COVID-19 patients in Israel, 215 of whom were on ventilators, and the overall death toll since the onset of the pandemic stood at 1,719.

The prime minister went on to say that decisions regarding the continuation of the lockdown, which began just before Rosh Hashanah, would only be made on Thursday.

During Monday’s Cabinet meeting, the government would discuss “long-term coronavirus exit data, the transition from stage to stage, safeguarding the elderly population, larger fines and increased discipline and enforcement—because after all, our lives are at risk,” he said.

Netanyahu concluded by making a Sukkot holiday reference, saying, “I’m asking all of you to come together like the ‘Four Species’ for the good of our nation, for the good of all citizens of Israel, in the face of the global coronavirus pandemic—we will win.”

In a letter to the U.S. State Department, the Democratic legislators pressed the Trump admin to revoke its condemnation of the flotilla and rescind calls for port restrictions from allies.
Police told JNS that an officer was injured as a result of protesters attempting to remove barriers and that no arrests were made.
The latest version blames Iran entirely and invokes a U.N. provision that could allow for the use of force.
Washington is “fighting this war side-by-side with a country, whose potential nuclear weapons program the U.S. government officially refuses to acknowledge,” the lawmakers wrote to the U.S. secretary of state.
Trump says U.S. will intensify strikes if Tehran rejects a draft deal, as officials say a 14-point framework to end the war is close.
Officials condemned prosecutors’ alleged decision to go after Jewish circumcisers, calling it antisemitic and a threat to religious freedom.