The Times of Israel reported on Tuesday’s occasions as they unfolded.
Some municipalities blatantly criticize the government’s resolution to impose curfews in the middle of the night in their towns or parts of them.
The municipality of Beitar Illit, an ultra-Orthodox colony, is going to say that it will not cooperate with the closure unless “totally transparent” explanations are given.
The municipality argues that the haredi villages are closed in their entirety (apparently ignoring the Arab villages), while certain other neighborhoods are included in the measures.
“We ask for full transparency on infection rates and detailed explanations of why a curfew is being imposed in an ultra-Orthodox city,” the municipality said in a statement.
“We cannot take action without transparency. We can only cooperate to lower morbidity rates when this explanation is provided to residents.
Jerusalem Mayor Moshe Lion has said he will comply with the government’s order amid night curfews in parts of the capital, and is strongly critical of the policy.
“I don’t know what a curfew is in the middle of the night,” Lion told public broadcaster Kan. “For the next two months we have been cautious about mass marriages in the eastern component of the city. When we communicate about the curfew in the middle of the night in Ramot, a community of 55,000 people, it means that they are going to close due to about three hundred patients. I cannot do this for residents. “
The Eilat municipality has carried out a crusade that has prevented a city-wide curfew, but now also claims that it is going to revoke the resolution to close a neighborhood, arguing that even this step “doesn’t make sense. “
Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei says the caricatures of the Prophet Muhammad that were republished through the French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo last week are “unforgivable. “
“The grave and unforgivable sin committed through a French weekly by insulting the luminous and holy personality of (the) prophet has revealed, once again, the hostility and malicious resentment maintained by Western political and cultural organizations opposed to Islam and the Muslim community. ” Khamenei said in English.
“The excuse of ‘freedom of expression’ put forward by some French politicians to condemn this grave crime of insulting the Holy Prophet of Islam is absolutely unacceptable, false and demagogic. “
– AFP
A meeting of the Knesset Home Affairs and Environment Committee is interrupted after a fireplace explodes in the ceiling of the hall.
Committee chair Miki Haimovich says there is a smell of smoke when talking about how to prepare local government for the climate crisis.
The fountain is on the ceiling, caused by an electrical short circuit. All participants left the room.
About 4 hours before the midnight curfew goes into effect to combat the spread of the coronavirus at 40 hotspots, Acting Police Chief Motti Cohen wraps up a briefing, saying he hopes that officials judge while enforcing the shutdown.
“Our compliance policy will continue to be primarily one of public dialogue, education, judgment and cooperation,” he said.
“This is what I expect from each and every one of the commanders and officers in the rhythm of this mission. “
Iranian National Television, which named an anonymous official, said Anglo-Iranian nationality Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe faces a new charge.
The report gives details.
Zaghari-Ratcliffe had been released as a criminal due to the coronavirus pandemic after serving nearly the entirety of her five-year sentence. Zaghari-Ratcliffe was arrested while on vacation with her young daughter in April 2016. Her circle of relatives says that she in Iran stopped in their circle of relatives, denying that they were conspiring against Iran.
Zaghari-Ratcliffe worked for the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the agency’s charitable arm.
– AP
Palestinians have recorded 717 new cases of the new coronavirus in the past 24 hours and a record of ten deaths, for the Palestinian Authority’s fitness ministry.
Some 177 cases have been reported in Arab spaces in East Jerusalem, while 118 more have been shown in the Gaza Strip. While Hebron and East Jerusalem were once the centers of the pandemic, with other spaces recording a handful of cases coinciding with the day, the distribution is more even. Nablus has 75 new instances and Ramallah has 60 new infections.
Lately there are 11,000 active cases among Palestinians and 215 have died since the start of the pandemic.
– Aaron Boxerman
A pilot program has been introduced in the US military to use Skylord drones, the production of which has been directed by the Israeli Defense Ministry, the ministry said in a statement.
“The program produced a drone formula with an immersive remote interface that protects troops opposing various incoming air threats, especially drones,” the Defense Ministry said in English.
“The functions of the formula have been demonstrated in Israel, with proven interceptions of incendiary devices brought into the Gaza border through terrorist organizations,” the ministry said.
He said the program follows a joint R&D program run through the Defense Research and Development Directorate of the Israel Defense Ministry, in collaboration with the Israeli company Xtend and the Office of Technical Support for the fight. Department of Defense Against Terrorism (CTTSO).
Several dozen drones will be used, he said, adding that the studies and the progression procedure have taken a year.
“Using an AR device and one-handed controller, an army operator can use Skylord’s formula to control the drone and carry out complex responsibilities from a distance, with wonderful ease and precision,” he said.
Chad has announced to Israel its goal of opening an official diplomatic project in Jerusalem within a year, Channel 12 reports.
The network says that Chad’s closet president is visiting Israel recently and has met with his Israeli counterpart, national security adviser Meir Ben-Shabbat.
According to the unfunded report, he has lately been part of a security delegation to the Jewish state for meetings as a component of normalizing ties with the African Muslim nation.
There is no confirmation from officials.
Patrick Schelling, a Swiss cyclist who lately competes for the Israel Start-Up Nation team, has been banned from the game for 4 months for drug addiction.
The progression comes as the Start-Up Nation makes a historic first appearance for a Jewish state team at the Tour de France, the world’s largest cycling event. However, Schelling is on the list for this race.
Professor Ronni Gamzu, the coronavirus czar, said in a presentation that disease rates in Israel’s high-infection areas, or “red” cities, are among those in the world.
“We want to prevent gatherings that are hotbeds of infection, especially in the red cities,” Gamzu said.
“I am convinced that red towns can orange,” he says, referring to the government’s “traffic light” program, which classifies towns and cities as “red,” “orange,” “yellow,” or “green,” depending on their contagion. rates.
Gamzu also says he is targeting 100,000 daily coronavirus tests through November 1. He says an effective touch-tracking mechanism to prevent chains of infection is unlikely to be in place until at least then.
Earlier today, the Health Department said 3,425 new coronavirus cases were shown, the highest daily number since the start of the pandemic, breaking a previous record set last week. Test grades also reached a new high of more than 40,000.
Israeli officials verify Channel 12’s report that Chad told Israel it would open a diplomatic project in Jerusalem within a year.
Prime Minister’s Office spokesperson Mark Regev only confirms that Benjamin Netanyahu has met with the son of Chad’s leader Idriss Deby, Abdelkarim Deby.
A spokesperson for the Foreign Ministry tells The Times of Israel that to his best knowledge, the report is baseless. However, the visit has been organized by the National Security Council, not the Foreign Ministry.
The head of Iran’s nuclear program reportedly says Tehran has begun to construct a hall for the production of advanced centrifuges to replace the one in the Natanz site that was damaged in an explosion in July.
That blast was said to have been caused by sabotage, and reportedly posed a significant setback to the nuclear program.
The new site will be in “the heart of the mountains,” Ali Akbar Salehi tells state TV, according to Reuters.
“It was decided to establish a more modern, wider and more comprehensive hall in all dimensions in the heart of the mountains near Natanz. Of course, the work has begun,” he says.
During nighttime curfews in coronavirus high-infection areas that take effect at 7 p.m. today for the first time, there will be no limitation on anyone entering the so-called “red” zones, the Ynet site reports, citing a decree handed to police.
People who don’t live in “red” zones can still enter and exit them freely. Residents of those areas won’t be allowed to exit them.
Protests will be allowed even in “red” zones.
Intelligence Minister Eli Cohen says Chad’s cabinet chairman, Abdelkarim Déby, who is also its president’s son, has told him the country will open a diplomatic mission in Jerusalem, confirming an earlier report.
Cohen says in a statement that he met Déby, who “expressed willingness” to open such a mission.
They also decided to “deepen the security cooperation” and agreed that a business delegation from Israel will go to Chad to promote economic projects in agriculture, and particularly in minerals.
They also praised Israel’s normalization with the United Arab Emirates, according to Cohen’s office.
The United States accuses China of fearing a free media, citing new restrictions on international press.
China’s foreign ministry “has informed us that they plan to further limit access for foreign journalists working in the PRC,” State Department spokeswoman Morgan Ortagus says.
“Why is the CCP afraid of independent and investigative media reporting?” she writes on Twitter, referring to the Chinese Communist Party.
— AFP
The Health Ministry publishes the details of the nightly curfew to take place starting 7 p.m. today in coronavirus hotspots, as set out by Attorney General Avichai Mandelblit.
Following is a list of activities for which residents of the so-called “red” zones will be nevertheless allowed to leave their homes:
1. Going to work and returning from it, or transporting a person to and from work;
2. Purchasing food, medicine and vital products or receiving vital services;
3. Receiving medical treatment;
4. Donating blood;
5. Taking part in a demonstration;
6. Participating in legal proceedings involving the person or in which they are required to take part;
7. Going to the Knesset;
8. Receiving treatment from welfare authorities;
9. Sports activities alone or with people living in the same household, up to 500 meters away from the house;
10. A brief stay or walk outside, alone or with people living in the same household, up to 500 meters away from the house;
11. Women going to a mikveh ritual bath;
12. Participating in a funeral, brit milah circumcision, prayer or wedding of a first-degree relative;
13. Providing medical assistance or other necessary assistance to a person in need;
14. Transferring a minor whose parents live separately from one parent to the other;
15. Transferring a minor whose parent needs to go for a vital activity, with nobody in the house to leave the minor with.
During the curfew, businesses will not be allowed to open apart from vital businesses, which are food stores (not including restaurants); pharmacies; optical shops; shops whose main business is selling hygiene products; and labs for fixing communications devices and computers.
Beyond that, there are no more travel restrictions on entry and exit from the “red” zones.
The Israel Defense Forces deploys a Home Front Command reserve battalion to the area of the so-called Triangle, a region of mostly Arab towns and cities along the border between Israel and the West Bank, to provide civil aid in light of a major outbreak of the coronavirus there, the military says.
“This morning, the 996th Reserve Battalion of the Home Front Command arrived to provide assistance to the area of the ‘Triangle,’ as part of the IDF’s assistance to areas with high infection rates,” the military says.
This includes establishing a drive-in coronavirus testing facility in the area of Daliyat al-Carmel “in order to increase the rate of testing carried out in the region in light of the growing [number of] infections,” the IDF says.
The military also releases a number of statistics from the past 24 hours that it says shows its efforts to combat the pandemic.
The nearly 300 soldiers trained to perform epidemiological surveys performed 3,406 of them over the past 24 hours.
The Home Front Command also took 8,793 of the 46,153 coronavirus samples taken today. Another 12,829 samples were transported to laboratories from drive-in testing facilities by the IDF. Ninety soldiers are currently working in coronavirus testing labs, the military says.
In addition, the IDF is currently operating 21 coronavirus hotels — 17 of which are being used to treat the 3,096 people who have confirmed cases of COVID-19 but only light symptoms, and four that are used to house 645 people who need to be in quarantine.
— Judah Ari Gross
The Israel Defense Forces launches a surprise exercise in the West Bank’s Judea and Samaria Division simulating the military’s response to a kidnapping, the military says.
The drill was launched as part of a series of surprise inspections by IDF Chief of Staff Aviv Kohavi.
“During the exercise, the division’s ability to handle a kidnapping situation, including cooperation between organizations and between branches [of the military], will be tested,” the IDF says.
The military says residents of the West Bank can expect to see additional troop movements and vehicular activity.
This is Kohavi’s fourth such surprise exercise, following one held in the navy last September, one in the Northern Command last November and a cyber defense drill last December.
— Judah Ari Gross
The first midnight curfew has gone into effect in some 40 cities and neighborhoods with the highest morbidity rates from coronavirus.
It will be in effect every day between 7 p. m. and at five in the morning, for a week.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu apologizes to the family of Yaqoub Abu Al-Qia’an, a Bedouin man who was shot dead in 2017 by police, who said he was carrying out a terror attack, amid a push by the premier’s loyalists to claim police covered up the incident to protect the force’s image amid graft probes into Netanyahu.
Whereas police have continued to claim that Abu Al-Qia’an was killed while carrying out a car-ramming attack during a pre-dawn police operation to raze part of his village of Umm al-Hiran in 2017, investigations by the Shin Bet security organization and the Police Internal Investigations Department (PIID) have cast doubt on that allegation, finding indications that he lost control of the vehicle after being mistakenly shot. An officer was killed when he was run over by the car.
“They said he was a terrorist,” Netanyahu says during a press conference, addressing the family. “Yesterday it came out that he wasn’t a terrorist. Yesterday it came out that senior officials in the prosecution turned him into a terrorist to protect themselves.”
Netanyahu and his allies have been seizing on a television news report yesterday that raised questions about police handling of the affair, using it as a tool to question the charges against the premier.
The report alleged that then-state prosecutor Shai Nitzan closed probes into alleged police wrongdoing, including in this case, out of fears it could tarnish the image of law enforcement as it was investigating Netanyahu for corruption, in cases that have now become a trial against the premier.
A new initiative will significantly lower the cost of group trips to Israel for Jewish-American teens.
The Jewish Education Project announces that it has received a $20 million gift from The Marcus Foundation for its RootOne initiative. The funds will subsidize trips by five US Jewish youth groups — the pluralistic BBYO, the Orthodox NCSY and the Reform NFTY, along with USY and Ramah, both affiliated with the Conservative movement.
With the subsidies, the groups can lower the cost of the trips by $3,000 per participant. The cost typically ranges from $4,500 to $8,000 for trips lasting three to six weeks.
The initiative hopes to increase the number of teens participating in the trips by 40% every year, according to a statement.
“We want young people stepping onto their college campuses with deep connections to Israel and strong Jewish identities,” Marcus Foundation Chairman Bernie Marcus says in the statement.
The first trips financed through the initiative are expected to take place next summer.
— JTA
Prof. Ronni Gamzu, the leader of Israel’s coronavirus response, has entered quarantine, Hebrew-language media reports.
The development comes after one of the members of Gamzu’s team was diagnosed with COVID-19.
The brother of Yaqoub Abu Al-Qia’an comments on Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s apology for calling his brother a terrorist over a 2017 incident that resulted in his death and the death of a policeman, in what police still insist was a terror attack.
“I hope the apology is honest and genuine, and that it isn’t because of the cases against him,” says Jabar Abu Al-Qia’an.
Whereas police have continued to claim that Abu Al-Qia’an was killed while carrying out a car-ramming attack during a pre-dawn police operation to raze part of his village of Umm al-Hiran in 2017, investigations by the Shin Bet security organization and the Police Internal Investigations Department (PIID) have cast doubt on that allegation, finding indications that he lost control of the vehicle after being mistakenly shot.
Netanyahu and his allies have been seizing on a television news report yesterday that raised questions about police handling of the affair, using it as a tool to question the charges against the premier.
The report alleged that then-state prosecutor Shai Nitzan closed probes into alleged police wrongdoing, including in this case, out of fears it could tarnish the image of law enforcement as it was investigating Netanyahu for corruption, in cases that have now become a trial against the prime minister.
The Education Ministry says that 1,817 students in elementary, middle and high schools have caught the coronavirus since schools started a week ago.
It adds that 25,000 students are in quarantine after coming in contact with a confirmed carrier.
The Palestinian Authority has scaled down its criticism of the Israel-UAE normalization deal ahead of an Arab League meeting on the matter tomorrow in Cairo, the Reuters news agency reports.
The report says a draft resolution presented by the PA ambassador “does not include a call to condemn, or act against, the Emirates over the US-brokered deal.”
PA President Mahmoud Abbas today issued instructions “banning any offensive statements or actions towards Arab leaders, including UAE rulers,” according to the report.
It is a stark departure from past rhetoric by Palestinian leaders, including Abbas, who have called the pact a “betrayal” and a “stab in the back.”
The draft resolution reportedly says the Israel-UAE agreement “doesn’t diminish Arab consensus over the Palestinian cause, the Palestinian cause is the cause of the entire Arab nation.”
It adds: “The trilateral announcement doesn’t change the principal Arab vision based on the fact that the two-state solution on the 1967 borders is the only way to achieve peace in the Middle East.”
MK Yinon Azoulay of the ultra-Orthodox Shas party has been confirmed to have the coronavirus, according to the Knesset spokesperson’s office.
Azoulay updated the Knesset Guard on the positive test result he received.
Attorneys for Sara Netanyahu, the prime minister’s wife, say they will demand her conviction last year in a case of misusing state funds be overturned, after a TV report yesterday alleged that a prosecutor in the case was in conflict of interest and his colleagues covered that fact up.
The defense team says in a statement that it will ask the state comptroller for all of the documents of the conversations revealed in the Channel 12 report.
“The information exposed proves that the case against Sara Netanyahu was tailor-made, polluted and corrupted from the start,” they say in the statement.
Yesterday’s report claimed that senior law enforcement officials filed a complaint with the state comptroller in recent days alleging that Superintendent Avi Rotenberg, the chief investigator into the allegations Sara Netanyahu misspent public funds for her personal benefit, did not disclose to his superiors in 2016 that he was in an extramarital relationship with Judy Nir-Mozes.
Nir-Mozes is the sister of Yedioth Ahronoth publisher Arnon Mozes, who has been charged together with the prime minister on allegations that they attempted an illegal quid-pro-quo deal, in one of the three cases against the premier.
Israel and the United Arab Emirates will sign a historic deal normalizing relations at a White House ceremony on September 15, US officials say.
The officials say senior delegations from both countries will likely be led by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Emirati Foreign Minister Abdullah bin Zayad, the brother of the UAE crown prince. The officials, who are not authorized to discuss the matter publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity, say the ceremony will either be on the South Lawn, the Rose Garden or inside depending on weather.
The ceremony will come just a month after the agreement to establish full diplomatic relations was announced on August 13. The The historic deal delivered a key foreign policy victory to US President Donald Trump as he seeks reelection, and reflected a changing Middle East in which shared concerns about arch-enemy Iran have largely overtaken traditional Arab support for the Palestinians.
That announcement has been followed by the first direct commercial flight between the countries, the establishment of telephone links and commitments to cooperate in numerous areas.
— AP
In addition to coronavirus czar Prof. Ronni Gamzu, Health Minister Yuli Edelstein and several other senior officials will enter a 14-day quarantine after a staff member in the government’s COVID-19 task force caught the coronavirus, the Health Ministry announces.
Following an epidemiological investigation, senior members of Edelstein’s office will also be required to quarantine, as will Deputy Health Minister Yoav Kisch, Health Ministry Director-General Chezy Levy and other top ministry officials, according to the statement.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu issues a statement confirming his attendance at next week’s White House signing ceremony for the Israel-UAE normalization agreement.
“I am proud to travel to Washington next week, at the invitation of [US] President [Donald] Trump, and to attend the historic White House ceremony establishing the peace agreement between Israel and the United Arab Emirates,” he says.
— Jacob Magid
The US Treasury sanctions two former Lebanese Cabinet ministers who are allied with the Hezbollah terror group, in a rare move against politicians close to the Iran-backed group.
The sanctioned officials are former finance minister Ali Hassan Khalil and former public works and transportation minister Youssef Fenianos.
Khalil is a senior official with the Shiite Amal group that is headed by Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri and Fenianos is a member of the Christian Marada group that is allied with Hezbollah and the Syrian government.
The US Treasury says Khalil and Fenianos “provided material support to Hezbollah and engaged in corruption.”
US officials have been warning that a new wave of sanctions will target allies of Hezbollah, which is considered a terrorist organization by Washington, Israel and many other countries.
The US has been targeting Hezbollah with sanctions for years, but this is the first time it has imposed sanctions on officials of Amal and Marada that are closely allied with Hezbollah.
— with agencies
Israel and the United Arab Emirates will sign a historic deal normalizing relations at a White House ceremony on September 15, US officials say.
The officials say senior delegations from both countries will likely be led by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Emirati Foreign Minister Abdullah bin Zayad, the brother of the UAE crown prince. The officials, who are not authorized to discuss the matter publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity, say the ceremony will either be on the South Lawn, the Rose Garden or inside depending on weather.
The ceremony will come just a month after the agreement to establish full diplomatic relations was announced on August 13. The The historic deal delivered a key foreign policy victory to US President Donald Trump as he seeks reelection, and reflected a changing Middle East in which shared concerns about arch-enemy Iran have largely overtaken traditional Arab support for the Palestinians.
This announcement followed the first direct publicity flight between countries, the status quo of telephone links, and cooperation commitments in many areas.
– AP