Coronavirus czar Prof. Nachman Ash said on Thursday that the two-week coronavirus lockdown the government voted on Wednesday will not suffice in bringing national morbidity down.
"It was decided that after two weeks we will hold a general assessment and see if we need to keep extending it [the lockdown]. This will definitely need to happen," he told Ynet.
"I do not think we will be able to now the national situation in two weeks and will no be able to identify a clear drop in morbidity," he added.
Ministers Wednesday decided that Israel will go into its third national lockdown on Sunday at 5pm to limit the soaring spread of coronavirus
The lockdown will last for two weeks, but will be extended for another two if the goal of less than 1,000 new infections per day is not met. The country has seen daily infections spiral to more than 3,000 and on Tuesday saw a 5.7% positivity rate.
Like the previous lockdown that ended in mid-October, the public will be restricted from traveling no more than one kilometer from their homes and banned from entering residences in which they do not live; trade and entertainment venues will be closed; restaurants will only be able to provide food deliveries; non-public facing businesses will be able to operate at 50% capacity; public transport will operate at 50% of the usual schedule; and social gatherings will be restricted to 20 people in an open air location and 10 people indoors.
Unlike the previous two lockdowns, the schools will remain partially open to students, with kindergartens, grades 1-4 and 11-12 attending classes in person from 8am to 1pm while special ed classes will continue unchanged. Parents will be able to leave their children at school between 7am and 2pm.
The transfer of children between two parents who do not live together will also continue uninterrupted.
Gantz and Netanyahu made the decision during talks Wednesday evening attended by Health Minister Yuli Edelstein, Interior Minister Aryeh Deri, Science Minister Izhar Shay and National Security Adviser Meir Ben-Shabbat.
The decision must still be approved by the cabinet in a meeting set to take place before Friday evening.
First published: 09:45, 12.24.20