Middle East

Israel requires masks indoors again as Delta variant drives up cases

TEL AVIV, June 24 (Reuters) – Israel told its citizens on Friday they must again wear masks indoors, 10 days after being allowed to ditch them, amid a sustained surge in coronavirus infections attributed to the highly contagious Delta variant.

The mask requirement had been one of only a few social curbs remaining as Israel’s rapid vaccination drive kept cases down.

But infections more than quadrupled this week to 138 after outbreaks attributed to the Delta variant at two schools, prompting officials to tighten some restrictions again and urge parents to have children between 12 and 15 vaccinated.

The health ministry reimposed the mask requirement for all indoor settings except the home, and said it was also recommending masks be worn at large outdoor gatherings, specifically mentioning gay pride events taking place around Israel this weekend.

Some 55 percent of Israel’s 9.3 million population have received both doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine. Eligibility was extended to 12- to 15-year-olds last month, but take-up in that age group has been low.

In April, Israel’s pandemic response coordinator, Nachman Ash, said Israel could achieve “herd immunity” when 75 percent of its population were either vaccinated or naturally immune after having contracted COVID-19.

But on Thursday, allowing for the higher contagiousness of the Delta variant, he put that figure at “at least 80 percent”.

Currently around 65 percent of Israel’s population have been vaccinated or have recovered from COVID-19, the health ministry says.

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IMAGE: Ultra-Orthodox Jewish men, wearing protective masks, prepare to dip cooking utensils in boiling water to remove remains of leaven in preparation for the upcoming Jewish holiday of Passover as the country begins to emerge from coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic closures due to it’s rapid vaccine roll-out, in Ashdod, Israel March 25, 2021.

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