Prime Minister Naftali Bennett said in closed talks overnight Thursday he believed the spread of the Omicron coronavirus variant will reach massive proportions but will be short-lived.
"There is going to be serious bedlam, but it will be relatively short-lived. We'll reach insane figures," the premier told his ministers, adding he estimated the spread of Omicron will peak within 7–10 days.
He also advocated further restrictions in hopes of avoiding another lockdown as the number of daily confirmed coronavirus cases hovered above 1,000 for the first time in two months.
"No one wants a lockdown, but you can't predict the future," he said. "Our goal is to act with full force so there won't be a lockdown, do whatever we can to avoid a lockdown. Let's give a little now to avoid a disaster later."
Bennett further said he hoped the public would cooperate with the government's efforts and vaccinate their children as he works to shore up Israel's pediatric vaccination campaign through the country's health funds and education system.
Meanwhile, Israel on Tuesday became the first country in the world to begin offering a fourth coronavirus vaccine booster shot shortly after ministers warned the country may be headed towards a general lockdown as soon as next month.
The coronavirus cabinet convened Tuesday evening to discuss putting in place further measures to stem the spread of the highly mutated Omicron variant of COVID amid worrying signs of resurging morbidity.
Shortly after the meeting a panel of health experts advising the government on the pandemic approved offering a fourth vaccine booster shot to immunocompromised sectors of the public and those over the age of 60, provided it has been at least four months since their last vaccine jab. The fourth booster will also be offered to medical teams.
Bennett's office said the campaign, which still requires bureaucratic approvals, is expected to begin in the coming days.
Prior to the meeting, ministers approved via telephone vote reducing attendance for public employees to 50% from December 26 through January 26.
Health Ministry officials also presented ministers with a list of recommendations, including tightening gathering caps at businesses and public events.
The panel also agreed on an outline that would only allow in-person learning in cities with bad COVID-19 outbreaks if at least 70% of students have been vaccinated. If immunization rates are below 70%, schools will have to revert to distance learning.