The Times of Israel released Tuesday’s occasions as they unfolded.
The Palestinian Authority’s Ministry of Health reports 403 new coronavirus infections in more than 24 hours. Of these, 248 infections have been shown in the West Bank, with another 155 among Palestinians in Israeli-controlled East Jerusalem, which the Palestinian Authority counts in its own statistics.
Hebron remains the focus of the coronavirus epidemic in the West Bank with 119 new instances. However, dozens of cases are also spreading in refugee camps around the West Bank, adding Ramallah open air and the Jordan Valley, according to the Palestinian Authority’s Ministry of Health.
Despite the Palestinian Authority’s strict closure restrictions on the West Bank spaces it controls, the coronavirus curve continues to worsen, Palestinian Authority Prime Minister Mohammad Shtayyeh said Saturday.
A total of 63 Palestinians in the West Bank have died of coronavirus since the pandemic began in March.
– Aaron Boxerman
Iran reports a new record number of deaths in a day of 229 deaths from the new coronavirus, after weeks of emerging numbers in the most affected country in the Middle East.
“Unfortunately, we have lost 229 of our compatriots to COVID-19 infection in the last 24 hours,” said Health Ministry spokeswoman Sima Sadat Lari.
“This brings the total number of deaths to 14,634,” he said in televised statements.
Iran announced its past death toll of 221 at COVID-19 on July 9.
The Islamic Republic has fought the resurgence of the virus, and official figures indicate an increase in new infections and deaths from a minimum of two months in May.
Lari also raises the number of cases in the country to 278,827, with 2,625 more people who tested positive for the disease on the last day.
– AFP
Culture Minister Asaf Zamir (Kakhol Lavan) criticizes Health Minister Yuli Edelstein, who said earlier that a Knesset committee to reopen would lead to a new blockade of Israel.
“The ‘blocking’ of the global will even be in our lexicon,” Zamir says.
“The economic ramifications of coronavirus will be more severe than those of health.”
An army court in the West Bank sentences a Palestinian teenager to life in prison for the murder of Israeli American Ari Fuld in a 2018 stabbing terrorist attack at the Gush Etzion crossing in the West Bank, Hebrew media reports.
The Court of Judea’s army also ordered 17-year-old Khalil Jabarin to pay an unspecified sum to Fuld’s circle of relatives in compensation.
Earlier this year, the court found that Jabarin was guilty of one count of deliberately causing death, murder, and three counts of attempted murder.
Jabarin stabbed Fuld, a father of four, continually in the back and neck while outside a supermarket near the Gush Etzion crossing in the center of the West Bank.
After being stabbed, Fuld chased and shot his assailant, who sought to attack a store employee, in all likelihood saving his life. Then he collapsed and ran to the hospital, but succumbed to his wounds.
Prosecutors inform Meir Turgeman, former lieutenant mayor of Jerusalem, of his goal of calling him corruption and corruption crimes, pending a hearing.
Turgeman is accused of receiving more than 350,000 shekels ($102,000) in bribes, fraud, abuse of trust, tax crimes and stealing nearly 70,000 shekels, according to a report by the prosecution.
Five others, Turgeman’s son, will also be charged with corruption, abuse of trust, obstruction of justice and falsification of evidence.
U.S. Defense Secretary Mark Esper said he plans to travel to China this year, as Washington takes a tougher stance against Beijing in the disputed South China Sea.
Esper says he has spoken several times with his Chinese counterpart and hopes to finish the year.
He said at a seminar that one of the objectives of the holiday would be to “identify the mandatory formulas for crisis communication and our intentions to compete brasably in the foreign formula to which we all belong.”
– AFP
As the Department of Health struggles to locate a suitable candidate willing to fight coronavirus, the branch is reported to experience another crisis.
Dr. Salman Zarka, the principal candidate for the ministry’s new director of public aptitude in siegal Sadetzki’s post, refused, the Twelfth Channel reports.
Zarka, director of Ziv Medical Center in Safed and an expert in public fitness, will tell Health Minister Yuli Edelstein, who is rejecting the offer because “he has no chance of success at work,” a zarka anonymous wife is quoted. as saying
The associate says Zarka will gain sufficient authority, especially in the case of the imminent appointment of an official to lead the crusade to involve the pandemic.
“He would have been criticized and wasted his time in battles with officials in the ministry.”
Sadetzki resigned earlier this month, criticizing the authorities’ handling of the ongoing coronavirus outbreak and describing a chaotic and ineffective approach to tackling the crisis in a lengthy post to her Facebook page.
Senior Fatah and Hamas officials are meeting today in Gaza to discuss a planned joint rally to be held in the coming days, according to Hamas-linked Al-Resalah news.
Leaders of the rival Palestinian movements are scheduled to speak, including Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas and Hamas politburo chief Ismail Haniyeh.
“This will begin a new era of relations between Hamas and Fatah,” says Hamas senior official Hussam Badran.
A violent conflict between the two movements resulted in Hamas expelling Fatah from the Gaza Strip in 2007. Since then, several unsuccessful attempts have been made to create a unified Palestinian political front. Although Abbas speaking in a joint rally with Hamas in Gaza could be a major symbolic step in that direction, many Palestinians remain deeply skeptical that the two parties are serious about reaching an accord.
— Aaron Boxerman
A Jerusalem Municipality meeting is abruptly halted after Councilman Yohanan Weitzman (United Torah Judaism) shows up even though he is supposed to be in coronavirus quarantine.
Weitzman, whose daughter was recently diagnosed with COVID-19, claims he doesn’t need to be in isolation, Hebrew-language media reports.
But other council members disagree and refuse to continue the discussion until he leaves. Everyone leaves the hall and a security guard is summoned.
— ארי קלמן Ari kalman (@aronkalman1) July 21, 2020
Three settlers have been arrested over their involvement in a violent clash with Palestinians earlier this month in which details are contested by both sides.
Police say they arrested the three men yesterday because they are suspected of firing the gunshots that injured two Palestinians in the northern West Bank on July 5. One of them has been remanded until Sunday and the two others have been remanded until Thursday.
The two Palestinians had been hospitalized in moderate and light condition respectively in the nearby Salfit governorate, the Palestinian Authority Health Ministry said at the time.
Four settlers were lightly injured by thrown stones during the melee and taken to Kfar Saba’s Meir Medical Center for treatment.
Police did not specify who instigated the clash.
The Honenu right-wing legal aid group accuses police of “backing Arab terror,” saying the settlers had been attacked and fired in self-defense to save themselves from “lynching.”
The leader of the Histadrut labor federation threatens that additional public sector workers could go on strike if the government doesn’t reach an agreement with social workers to improve their working conditions.
Arnon Bar David meets with Inbal Hermoni, head of Israel Union of Social Workers, whose members launched an open-ended general strike earlier this month after failing to reach a deal with the Finance Ministry following repeated negotiations.
A statement from the Histadrut says Bar David warned during the meeting that other public sector employees could go on strike in solidarity with social workers, without further elaborating.
He pledged the Histadrut will begin paying NIS 1,000 to all striking workers out of its strike fund in the coming days, the statement says. Bar David and Hermoni also coordinated positions ahead of the latter’s expected meeting later today with Finance Minister Israel Katz.
Prof. Gabi Barbash has agreed to head the national battle against the coronavirus, Channel 12 reports.
The appointment comes after several days of talks, presumably over what powers he will have.
Barbash has previously served as Health Ministry director general and headed Tel Aviv’s Ichilov hospital for many years.
Hebrew-language media reports that Prof. Gabi Barbash will be appointed later today to head the national campaign against the coronavirus, without citing a source.
There is no official confirmation by the Health Ministry or any other government source.
A senior member of the Likud ruling party and an internal rival of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu extends support to MK Yifat Shasha-Biton, head of the Knesset’s coronavirus committee, who is under fire by the party leadership after she twice overturned government-issued coronavirus restrictions.
MK Gideon Sa’ar, who lost to Netanyahu in the last Likud leadership primary, responds to claims that Shasha-Biton, also from Likud, is catering to narrow interests at the expense of the public.
“We are in a long and severe crisis, and public trust is vital for success,” Sa’ar tweets. “Real parliamentary oversight isn’t an ‘interest’ of the Knesset. It is needed both to reach better results and to build public trust.”
The Haaretz daily says Gabi Barbash’s appointment as head of the national campaign against the coronavirus will be officially announced this evening in a press conference.
The unsourced report says the agreement came after a series of conversations between Barbash, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Health Minister Yuli Edelstein.
Barbash will reportedly receive relatively broad authority, more than merely heading the coronavirus testing apparatus.
The Dutch government has said it is suspending its contributions to a Palestinian organization that had used the subsidies to pay salaries to suspected terrorists.
The office of Sigrid Kaag, the Netherlands’ minister for foreign trade and development cooperation, told parliament yesterday that the Ramallah-based Union of Agricultural Work Committees used the money to pay two men in Israeli custody who are standing trial for the murder of a 17-year-old girl in a 2019 terror attack.
Samer Arbid and Abdul Razeq Farraj are alleged to be members of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine terror organization and had worked for the Union of Agricultural Work Committees alongside their alleged involvement with that terror group.
Kaag announces the suspension of funding while answering a parliamentary query by the Freedom Party, the Christian Union and the Reformed Political Party. The information about the two suspects came from research by the Israel-based NGO Monitor group, which examines the activity of nongovernmental organizations involved in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
According to the research, the Union of Agricultural Work Committees has received about $23 million in subsidies from the Dutch government since 2010.
That funding was suspended indefinitely on July 9 pending an investigation of “possible ties” between the Union of Agricultural Work Committees and the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, a spokesperson for Kaag writes in a reply to the query.
— JTA
Maj. Gen. Amir Abulafiya pulls his candidacy for the position of coronavirus point person amid reports that former Health Ministry director-general Gabi Barbash was due to get nominated for the role.
“He informed the defense minister and IDF chief of staff that he was withdrawing his candidacy,” Defense Minister Benny Gantz’s office says in a statement.
“The general wished Prof. Barbash the utmost success,” according to the statement, appearing to confirm the reports that Gabi Barbash will be appointed.
— Judah Ari Gross
A German man accused of killing two people in one of the worst acts of anti-Semitic violence in post-war Germany seeks to lay out his racist worldview at the opening of his trial, prompting stern warnings from the judge.
Stephan Balliet, 28, stands accused of shooting dead two people in October after he tried and failed to storm a synagogue in the eastern city of Halle last year.
He has been charged with two counts of murder and multiple counts of attempted murder in a case that has deeply rattled the country and fueled alarm about rising right-wing extremism and anti-Jewish violence, 75 years after the end of the Nazi era.
Addressing the court, Balliet claims he “decided in 2015 not to do anything more for this society which has replaced me with Muslims and Negroes,” in reference to the year when hundreds of thousands asylum seekers, many fleeing war in Syria and Iraq, were given refuge in Germany.
Judge Ursula Mertens cuts him off, warning that he could be thrown out of the hearing.
“I have the possibility to exclude you from the proceedings. I will not tolerate you committing crimes and insulting people in this courtroom.”
Undeterred, Balliet seeks to put forward his racist ideas, claiming he has “no problems with religions but with Semitism.”
Balliet tells the court he had been inspired by a gunman’s 2019 attack on Christchurch mosques in New Zealand, which killed 51 Muslim worshipers.
Prosecutors say Balliet used explosives and firearms to try to gain access to the synagogue, where 52 worshipers were celebrating Yom Kippur, the holiest day in the Jewish calendar.
After failing to break through the synagogue’s locked wooden door, he shot dead a female passerby and a man in a nearby kebab shop.
He apologizes for killing the German woman, saying he “really did not plan to or want to” shoot her.
— AFP
Police block roads near the Prime Minister’s Residence in Jerusalem, as protesters against the premier’s handling of the coronavirus crisis and its economic fallout gather for another rally.
Supporters of Netanyahu are also demonstrating, and police are separating the two groups and getting them away from the entrance to the official residence.
Police are deployed with increased force in the area, since many thousands are expected to attend.
Previous rallies have ended in violent clashes and mutual accusations between protesters and police.
— כאן חדשות (@kann_news) July 21, 2020
Police say they have arrested three young Israelis suspected of stealing a monkey from a zoo in the northern city of Kiryat Motzkin.
— חדשות הסקופים. (@Haskupim) July 21, 2020
Police received a complaint several days ago that a monkey worth thousands of shekels disappeared, the statement says.
It adds that after a “swift investigation that included various actions, including using various technological means,” the suspects, all residents of Kiryat Ata in their 20s, were apprehended.
Police return the primate safely to the zoo, and say the suspects likely intended to sell it. They will be brought tomorrow morning before a judge for a remand hearing.
A wave of threatening messages sent to politicians and other public figures in Germany is larger than previously thought, it emerges, deepening a row over possible far-right links in a regional police force.
At least 69 threats have been sent to almost 30 public figures and institutions across the country, says Peter Beuth, the interior minister of the state of Hesse.
The anonymous messages are all signed “NSU 2.0,” a reference to the German neo-Nazi cell National Socialist Underground that committed a string of racist murders in the 2000s.
Beuth tells the Hesse state parliament that in three cases, the recipients’ contact details may have been taken from police computers.
Last week, Hesse police chief Udo Muench resigned after it emerged that police computers were used to search for details of a far-left politician who subsequently received threatening emails.
Now, Beuth says there is so far “no proof” of a right-wing network within the police. He adds that the state police force is working to “restore its integrity” and identify the sender.
— AFP
Two Chinese nationals have been indicted for hacking COVID-19 vaccine research and the intellectual property of companies in the United States and other countries, the US Justice Department says.
The Chinese hackers also targeted human rights activists in the United States and Hong Kong, Assistant Attorney General for National Security John Demers says. he claims the hackers were working with China’s Ministry of State Security.
— AFP
Some 150 restaurant owners demonstrate in Haifa’s German Colony neighborhood against coronavirus closures forced upon them in recent months.
The restaurateurs, Jewish and Arab and from various areas of northern Israel, block roads and call for compensation and for the government to “resign.”
— Jack khoury.جاك خوري (@KhJacki) July 21, 2020
The anti-government protest near Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s official residence is actually comprised of several different rallies organized by more than 30 groups.
The rallies are by restaurant owners angry at repeated closures forced upon them in recent months; by self-employed Israelis who say government support has been insufficient, and by the so-called “black flag” anti-corruption protest against the premier, who is on trial for graft.
Additionally, demonstrators are railing against proposed legislation that would make government measures take effect without Knesset approval, saying it would remove vital oversight.
Hundreds are already demonstrating and police estimate thousands will show up.
Police have refused a request for masses to march later in the evening to the Knesset, but Channel 12 reports that an approval could be given.
The Hezbollah terror group accuses Israel of killing one of its members in an airstrike outside Damascus last night.
In a statement, the terror group says its operative Ali Kamel Mohsen Jawad was killed in an act of “Zionist aggression.”
In the past, Hezbollah has retaliated to deaths of its members at Israel’s hand with attacks on the Jewish state.
— Judah Ari Gross
Employees of the Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum have discovered handwritten inscriptions in shoes belonging to children who were sent to the Nazi death camp in German-occupied Poland.
The discoveries have been made in the course of efforts to preserve the shoes on display at the museum.
One inscription identifies a shoe as belonging to Amos Steinberg, who was born in Prague in 1938 and imprisoned with his parents in the Theresienstadt ghetto in 1942. He was later sent to Auschwitz.
“We can guess that it was most likely his mother who made sure that her child’s shoe was signed,” Hanna Kubik of the museum’s collections department says in a statement announcing the findings. “The father was deported in another transport. We know that on October 10, 1944, he was transferred from Auschwitz to the Dachau camp. He was liberated in the Kaufering sub-camp.”
In another shoe, employees find documents in Hungarian with several names: Ackermann, Brávermann and Beinhorn.
“These people were probably deported to Auschwitz in the spring or summer of 1944 during the extermination of Hungarian Jews,” Kubik says. “I hope that more detailed research will reveal details about each individual.”
Vast quantities of children’s shoes are on display at Auschwitz, and the museum has been engaged in an ongoing effort to preserve them. Many historical artifacts have been found in this process, including letters, newspaper fragments and bank notes, some of which were used as lining or padding.
About 230,000 children are estimated to have been imprisoned in Auschwitz, the vast majority of whom perished there.
— JTA
Health Ministry data shows 1,883 new coronavirus infections over the past 24 hours, with the number of active cases in Israel crossing 30,000 for the first time.
Two new deaths have been confirmed since this morning, bringing the toll to 424.
The total number of cases is 53,559, including 30,488 active cases.
The numbers of serious and moderate patients are slightly down, standing at 256 and 129, respectively. There are 77 patients on ventilators.
The ministry says the results of 27,299 coronavirus tests came back yesterday.
The Health Ministry estimates that Israel will have 1,000 serious COVID-19 patients in three weeks, Channel 12 reports.
The report quotes unnamed ministers as saying they understand the government is preparing to impose a nationwide lockdown soon.
Police have given approval for anti-government protesters to march from the Prime Minister’s Residence in Jerusalem to the Knesset, and demonstrators are currently heading to the parliament building.
Hebrew-language media reports that some 2,000 people have attended the rally, which was organized by some 30 groups and protests various aspects of the government’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic and its economic fallout.
— Yael Freidson (@YaelFreidson) July 21, 2020
The dispute between the Likud and Blue and White parties regarding whether to approve a state budget for one or two years is so severe that the parties are reportedly weighing postponing the deadline for approving it.
The Kan public broadcaster reports that the move could be made to prevent the government from dissolving and elections being called over the matter, with each side refusing to budge.
In the present situation, if the budget isn’t approved by August 24, the Knesset will automatically dissolve.
The Walla news site reports a potential compromise in a controversial government-proposed law that would make government restrictions to fight the coronavirus outbreak take effect immediately, without Knesset approval.
The report says the legislation will be changed so that instead of the Knesset okaying the measures retroactively, it will have 24 hours to approve them before they take effect.
Opposition lawmakers are reportedly demanding that the period be extended to 72 hours, to enable a “meaningful discussion.”
The Israel Defense Forces says 886 servicemen are currently diagnosed with the coronavirus, all displaying mild or no symptoms.
It says 7,558 soldiers are in quarantine.
Prominent members of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s Likud party were caught yesterday attending an indoor event in violation of coronavirus rules, despite repeated government calls to adhere to the rules, the Kan public broadcaster reports.
Attendants included Yaakov Hagoel, chairman of World Likud and vice chairman of the World Zionist Organization, as well as former Likud MK Nava Boker, a local council head and prominent Likud activists, according to the report.
More than 40 people attended the event, according to witnesses, and not everyone was wearing a mask.
Police officers arrived and demanded that some participants leave, and after some did — including Hagoel — they handed a NIS 5,000 fine to the organizer, Yoram Yazdi, but let the event continue.
Hagoel comments that the event was “outdoors” and was held in compliance with the rules, but that he left when too many people showed up.
— כאן חדשות (@kann_news) July 21, 2020
MK Moshe Arbel of the ultra-Orthodox Shas party will enter quarantine after being exposed to a coronavirus carrier, the Knesset’s spokesperson says.
The decision follows an epidemiological investigation by the Health Ministry.
Arbel is required to self-isolate until July 28.
Ashkenazi Chief Rabbi David Lau calls on Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Health Minister Yuli Edelstein to ease restrictions on synagogues by allowing more people in large shrines.
“There is nothing similar between a synagogue that can contain hundreds and sometimes thousands of worshipers, and a small synagogue that can barely host 20 people,” Lau writes in a letter sent to Netanyahu and Edelstein.
“The arbitrary setting of a small maximum number of worshipers isn’t right for every place,” he adds. “We must consider the size and the distance that can be kept from one another.”
The government is considering extreme measures such as lowering the minimum wage to encourage businesses to hire workers amid the coronavirus crisis, the Kan public broadcaster reports.
Other proposals reportedly being weighed include lowering the payment for working extra hours.
Unemployment in Israel currently stands at 21%.
Yaakov Litzman, head of the ultra-Orthodox United Torah Judaism party, says Blue and White’s choice to vote against the coalition’s wishes “is a challenge to our political partnership with them.”
He added that the Likud party “must decide if it is able to run a coalition or if it is losing itself politically.”