Cops said instructed not to enforce mask-wearing outdoors

Police officers have been instructed not to enforce the mandate requiring Israelis to wear face masks outdoors, even though it remains illegal to be without them in public, Hebrew-language media reports said Monday.

Officially, the mask-wearing rule is still in effect, but top police brass unofficially instructed cops “not to focus on the issue, almost not to deal with it, to reduce enforcement to zero,” Channel 13 News reported.

The focus will instead be on enforcement against those who violate quarantine rules, according to the report.

Due to the growing discussion about easing the mask rules, senior officers believe the police will lose public credibility if police continue to try to enforce them outside, the network said.

The reported change in enforcement policy is not meant to signal that Israelis may go outside without masks, but if they do and run into law enforcement, they are unlikely to be fined.

Israeli police officers enforce the COVID-19 regulations in Tel Aviv on February 27, 2021. (Tomer Neuberg/Flash90)

National coronavirus czar Nachman Ash on Monday said a discussion about ending face mask usage would be held after the ongoing Passover festival, which ends on Saturday.

He said that from a professional point of view, the masks “are far less significant in open spaces. We still want people in groups and in close spaces to wear masks.”

However, the director-general of the Health Ministry rejected the idea that face masks could soon be done away with.

“I don’t think so,” Chezy Levy responded during an interview with Army Radio, noting there are still 2.5 million children and another million people from age 16 and up who are not vaccinated.

Israel has recently been experiencing a trend of declining new coronavirus infections and active cases; a drop in the share of positive daily tests and in the basic reproduction number; and a fall in the closely watched number of serious COVID-19 cases in the country.

The Health Ministry said on Monday that 128 people were diagnosed with COVID-19 the day before and an additional 165 people were diagnosed since midnight, bringing to 832,125 the total number of cases in Israel since the outset of the pandemic.

The number of active cases further fell to 8,230. Sunday’s results, which came from 11,484 tests, represented a positive infection rate of 1.2 percent — the lowest rate recorded in nine months.

An Israeli receives a COVID-19 vaccine injection, at Clalit vaccination center in Jerusalem, on March 8, 2021. (Yonatan Sindel/Flash90)

The number of serious cases stood at 441, the lowest since December, after climbing to an all-time high of 1,201 in mid-January.

In a further indication of shrinking infections, the virus’s basic reproduction number, representing the average number of people each virus carrier infects, was given as 0.55. Any figure under 1 means the outbreak is abating. The figure represents the situation as of 10 days ago due to the incubation period.

The death toll stood at 6,197 on Monday evening.

Over 5.2 million Israelis have received their first vaccine shot and over 4.7 million have gotten the second shot, out of a population of 9 million. Around 3 million Israelis are not currently eligible to be vaccinated, including those younger than 16 and many of those who have recovered from COVID-19, among others.

Michael Bachner contributed to this report.

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