Israel, Palestinians Tightens the Curbs as Coronavirus Reemerges

Israel was one of the first nations to close the borders and impose restrictions when the global pandemic first emerged and the Palestinians quickly followed the suit

The authorities of Israel and Palestine have brought back a few of the coronavirus or COVID-19 restrictions after the number of new cases jumped in what officials fear could herald a second wave of the virus infections.

A partial lockdown got into effect on Wednesday in a town located in central Israel and several neighborhoods inside the city of Tiberias where the rates of infections were pretty much high. The Palestinian Authority put the West Bank city of the Hebron on coronavirus lockdown as well.

Israel was one of the first countries to close its borders and impose restrictions when the global pandemic first emerged and the Palestinians quickly followed suit. The campaign took a major economic toll, but it worked. An initial spike of hundreds of daily cases dropped to single digits. Israel has reported 308 fatalities, much less than many developed countries, and three people have died from the virus in the Palestinian territories.

COVID-19 Crisis

Coronavirus
Caption: WUHAN, Feb. 13, 2020 (Xinhua) -- Staff members work in a laboratory in Wuhan, central China's Hubei Province, Feb. 13, 2020. As a designated service provider of nucleic acid detection of the novel coronavirus, KingMed Diagnostics laboratory in Wuhan conducts non-stop detection service and detects over 2,000 samples from various cities in Hubei Province every day. (Xinhua/Xiong Qi/IANS) Xinhua/IANS

The restrictions have since been gradually eased in a bid to revive businesses that had closed, and with it infection numbers have slowly risen. On Tuesday, Israel saw 428 new cases and the Palestinians reported 179, the highest number to date. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he expected more communities would be added to the lockdown list and urged Israelis to follow social distancing guidelines. On Monday he gave police the authority to hand out 500 shekel ($146) fines to people not wearing masks in public.

Despite the spike in cases, Israel is unlikely to reimpose a full lockdown, during which unemployment soared. A 100-billion-shekel stimulus plan is already pushing the country's budget deficit in 2020 to an estimated 11 percent of gross domestic product. "Economic reserves are low with a limited arsenal for policymakers. This current state of affairs makes it very difficult to reimpose a closure," Bank Hapoalim, the country's biggest lender, said in a research report.

(With agency inputs)

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