Coronavirus: Israel marks Jewish New Year with second lockdown

Religious Jews maintained social distancing while participating in the last prayer on the eve of Rosh Hashanah, ahead of the new nationwide lockdown.
Religious Jews maintained social distancing while participating in the last prayer on the eve of Rosh Hashanah, ahead of the new nationwide lockdown.
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BBC Online :
Israel is entering a second nationwide lockdown to curb surging coronavirus cases, just as people begin to mark the start of Jewish New Year.
Rosh Hashanah is traditionally a time for big, family get-togethers.
But under the new three-week lockdown, Israelis must stay within 1km (0.6 miles) of their homes, with exceptions, and the number of people allowed in synagogues has been greatly reduced.
Israel currently has one of the highest Covid-19 infection rates in the world. In the past week, new cases have reached daily highs of more than 6,000, and the country’s leaders have apologised for their failure to contain the pandemic.
Israel has seen 1,169 deaths from Covid-19 and nearly 177,000 confirmed infections, according to a global tally kept by US university Johns Hopkins.
It is said to be the first developed nation to reimpose nationwide curbs.
However, the new national lockdown is widely unpopular, according to local media, with protests taking place before it came into force.
An Israeli woman wearing a clown outfit mocks Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu as she takes part in a demonstration against the government and an imminent and unprecedented second nationwide lockdown to tackle a spike in coronavirus, in Tel Aviv, on 17 September 2020.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has warned that, if necessary, he will not hesitate to impose harsher restrictions.
The restrictions, which came into effect from 14:00 local time (11:00 GMT), are the most extensive imposed in Israel since the first lockdown, which ran from late March until early May.
Mr Netanyahu has acknowledged the disruption the lockdown will cause to Jewish communities celebrating religious holidays that normally see families come together.
“This is not the kind of holiday we are used to. And we certainly won’t be able to celebrate with our extended families,” he said.
The restrictions on indoor gatherings will severely impact prayers in synagogues.
The second lockdown will cost the economy, which is in recession due to the pandemic, an estimated 6.5bn shekels (£1.4bn; $1.9bn), the finance ministry says.
“We are making every effort to balance health and economic needs,” Mr Netanyahu said on Thursday in a televised address.
Few here in Jerusalem dispute the need for a tougher approach, but there is frustration about how the government has handled the crisis. Unemployment has rocketed and many businesses are failing.
Moshe Shrefler’s popular restaurant in Mahane Yehuda market was empty just before the lockdown and has recently seen a 70% drop in business.
“[With] this closure, I hope they’re going to end this story once and for all,” he says.
But mum of baby twins Shiran Ben Yossi has just lost her job and is less optimistic.
“It’s going to be very hard,” she says. “I’m afraid it didn’t work the first time and it won’t work the second time.”
Israel was internationally praised for its effective, tight controls early on in the pandemic.
But it is widely seen as having lifted these too quickly and it now has one of the highest infection rates in the world.
On Wednesday, President Reuven Rivlin apologised for the failure of the country’s leaders to contain the virus since the first lockdown ended.
But he also appealed to Israelis to comply with the new measures: “This is a second chance and we must take it because we will not, I fear, get a third one,” he warned.
Housing Minister Yaakov Litzman resigned from the government on Sunday in protest at the new measures.
Mr Litzman, who leads an ultra-Orthodox Jewish party, said the lockdown would prevent Jewish people from celebrating their religious festivals, including Yom Kippur, the holiest day of the Jewish calendar, on 27 September.
Many nations are experiencing second surges of the virus. However, most governments are now imposing smaller local lockdowns in affected areas, rather than blanket national ones.

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