At a situational assessment in Tel Aviv Friday, Prime Minister Naftali Bennett said protection afforded by COVID-19 vaccines was “weaker than we’d hoped” against the surging Delta variant.
“Anyone who hoped that vaccines on their own would solve the problem — they won’t,” Bennett said at the meeting attended by ministers, health officials, national security council members, police and the military.
“Delta is surging” all over the world, he said. “On the one hand the vaccines are effective against the virus, and so we are making sure we have the necessary stocks. But vaccines alone are not enough.”
He added: “We don’t know exactly to what extent the vaccine helps, but it is significantly less” against Delta than previous strains. “We all hope to see a slowdown, but the facts at the moment are that there isn’t a slowdown — not here and not around the world.”
Still, the premier said, “Our goal is to allow routine life to continue with adjustments to the coronavirus.” Bennett said the government’s aim was to provide the public with clear directives with enough advance warning to prepare, “without surprises, without panic and mainly through forward planning.”
At the meeting, officials decided to move to quickly approve the use of home testing kits, increase enforcement, particularly of the “Revelry Pass” set to take effect next week for weddings, parties and other celebratory indoor gatherings, and conduct a review of travel policies at Ben Gurion Airport.
Meanwhile a top health official said Friday said the Health Ministry was not considering lockdowns at this stage.
“I don’t know how we’ve come to talk of lockdowns,” Sharon Alroy-Preis, head of public health at the ministry, told Channel 12 news. “We are not at a place of [considering] a lockdown during the holiday period [in September].”
She said that instead, health officials were pushing for broad use of the Green Pass system to only allow vaccinated and recovered individuals or those with negative tests to enter various venues.
Her comments seemed to contradict those made Thursday by Nachman Ash, the new director-general of the Health Ministry, who said closures remained a possibility for the High Holiday period that begins with Rosh Hashana and stretches for much of September.
“I think that it could be that we’ll get to the point where we’ll say ‘we need a lockdown,’” Ash told Channel 13 news. “I’m worried we might get there… in a few weeks, it’s possible we’ll get there.”
Starting Friday, all travelers, including those who are vaccinated or have recovered from COVID-19, were required to self-isolate for 24 hours upon arrival to Israel, or for a shorter period if they receive a negative test result.
Meanwhile, those returning from 15 countries deemed to have high infection rates will be required to quarantine for seven days with a negative test result, according to the ministry’s updated guidelines. The full quarantine period was recently shortened from the previous 10-14 days.
The countries considered to have high infection rates as of Friday are the United Arab Emirates, Seychelles, Ecuador, Ethiopia, Bolivia, Guatemala, Honduras, Zimbabwe, Zambia, Namibia, Paraguay, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica and Tunisia.
Starting next Friday, July 23, the following countries will be added to the list: the United Kingdom, Cyprus, Turkey, Georgia, Uganda, Myanmar, Fiji, Panama, Cambodia, Kenya and Liberia.
The Health Ministry also said that next Friday, Spain and Kyrgyzstan will be added to the list of countries with extreme rates of infection to which Israelis are barred from flying, provided that a government committee approves the ministry’s request.
The countries that are currently off-limits for Israelis are Uzbekistan, Argentina, Belarus, Brazil, South Africa, India, Mexico and Russia.
Health Ministry figures showed 855 new cases were confirmed on Thursday, the highest figure since March 22. That came after daily infections topped 750 on each of the previous three days. Of the 65,125 tests performed Thursday, 1.52 percent came back positive — a rate slightly higher than in recent days.
There are 5,817 active virus cases in the country, Health Ministry data showed, while the death toll stood at 6,443.
Health officials have linked the recent spike in infections in Israel to travelers who brought back new variants of the virus from abroad and did not properly quarantine after arriving.
The resurgence of coronavirus in Israel has been largely attributed to the spread of the Delta variant, which was first detected in India and is believed to be twice as contagious as the original COVID strain.
Source : timesofisrae