162 16 Cheshvan 5782 | October 22, 2021 man Mahmoud Abbas, Israel granted legal West Bank residency to 4,000 Palestinians. These included 2,800 Palestinians who left Gaza before the Hamas takeover in 2007, spouses of West Bank Palestinians, and other categories. The last such measure took place in 2008 and 2009, when 32,000 Arabs got residency rights in a diplomatic gesture to Abbas. ISRAEL ASSASSINATES EX-SYRIAN MP Syria has accused Israel of assassinat- ing Midhat Saleh, 54, an Israeli Druse Arab who served in the Syrian government after Israel jailed him for 12 years for terrorist activities. He was fatally shot while return- ing to his home at a Syrian village opposite the Israeli town of Majdal Shams where he was born. After his term in the Syrian parliament, President Assad appointed him a personal advisor and head of the country’s Golan Of- fice. Meanwhile, numerous Syrian and Irani- an-backed forces were killed and wounded in an Israeli airstrike in central Syria. Six Syrian soldiers died in an Israeli attack against an airport in the area a week earlier. COVID CONTINUES TO DROP IN ISRAEL Only 1,199 new coronavirus cases were diagnosed on Sunday, a massive drop from over 6,500 daily cases diagnosed a month earlier. The number of serious cases fell to 372 on Monday, 350 less that four weeks before. Israel’s death toll passed the 8,000- mark, with an average of 15 deaths a day this month. On one day last week, there were no deaths in 24 hours for the first time during the fourth wave. Daily cases have fallen to a three-month low, and Israel is considering expanding a “Green Class” program which lets children exposed to infected classmates be tested for the disease instead of having to go into quarantine. DIGITAL GREEN PASSES After weeks of technical difficulties, Israe- lis began using digital green passes to enter re- stricted businesses and venues. This will hope- fully make it harder to fake passes and reduce the tendency of guards to barely glance at cards and let people through. The Health Ministry was concerned over a drop in vaccinations, and warned that this might precipitate a fifth wave. Doctors were also con- cerned that due to a low turnout for flu vaccines, Israel’s hospitals may become overwhelmed by flu over winter. The situation was not alleviated by the declaration of MK Gadi Yevarkan of Likud that a “terrible incitement” against the unvac- cinated led him to fear that “people might be murdered,” and he decided not to take a second vaccination to identify with their cause. Meanwhile, a study by the Taub Center for Social Policy Studies found that 13.7% of Is- raelis were infected with Covid since the start of the pandemic until September, compared to 31% of chareidim. Covid expert Eran Segal of the Weizmann Institute said this might be due to the large num- ber of chareidi children not eligible for vac- cines, and to large chareidi families. MEDICAL INTERNS AND RESIDENTS RESIGN Hundreds of medical interns and resi- dents resigned from their hospital jobs, complaining of oppressive shifts of up to 26 hours with few breaks to attend to their personal needs. The resignations were to take effect in two weeks. They wanted to see the superior conditions promised by the Health Ministry in writing before changing their minds. At the same time, Israel introduced two plans. One is to encourage the immigration of medical professionals by reducing the exhaustive red tape currently required for their licensing in Israel and by providing fast-track training and employment oppor- tunities. A second plan involves granting visas for foreign tech workers to augment Isra- el’s shortage of 13,000 to 20,000 engineers and hi-tech experts. WHEN WILL TOURISTS BE LET IN? Israel has tentatively decided to reopen to vaccinated tourists from November 1, but still needs to decide what to do about many Americans who not have digital green pass certificates. Wrangling between the health and tourism ministries has held up an official announcement. The Health Ministry’s Dr. Sharon Alroy- Prei spoke of letting in vaccinated tourists from the US with certificates of vaccination even without a digital pass. She said she pre- ferred keeping a requirement for PCR testing before boarding a plane and after landing. There was also a possibility that Ameri- cans without digital passes may need to fill out forms on Israel’s Health Ministry website to get individual approval. So far, tourists have only been allowed to come in organized groups on condition that they travel in capsules and avoid mingling with the Israeli public. LOW RISK OF HEART INFLAMMATION An Israeli study published in the New England Journal of Medicine determined that the risk of developing myocarditis (a heart inflammation) after taking the Pfizer vaccine is extremely low. It found myocarditis in the overall Israeli population occurring at a rate of approxi- mately 1 per 26,000 males and 1 per 218,000 females after a second vaccine dose, with the highest risk again among young male recipi- ents. The risk per 100,000 persons after the second vaccine dose ranged from 0 to 15.1, and the overall risk among all persons stud- ied was 2.7/100,000, with only one death re- ported. The study concluded that “the incidence of myocarditis, although low, increased after the receipt of the BNT162b2 vaccine, par- ticularly after the second dose among young male recipients. The clinical presentation of myocarditis after vaccination was usually mild.” A companion article by another Israeli group in the same journal cited an overall risk of 2.1 cases per 100,000 persons after at least one dose of the vaccine. RAAM THREATENS TO TOPPLE GOVERNMENT The United Arab List (Raam) threatened to topple the coalition until it surrenders to its demand to pass legislation to connect tens of thousands of illegal Arab and Bedouin struc- tures to the national electricity grid. MK Walid Taha, chairman of the Knes- set Interior Committee, canceled all meetings set to legislate part of the economic arrange- ments bill accompanying the state budget un- til the coalition agreed to his party’s demand. The budget must be legislated by November 14 to prevent early elections. Regavim, a rightwing organization estab- lished to protect Israeli land, warned that “this extortionate bill endangers the rule of law and national planning and construction policy” by seeking “to connect not only existing illegal structures, but any and all illegal structures that will be built in the future. It is clear that approval of this law will result in a surge in illegal construction.” A no-confidence motion of Shas against the government and its budget almost toppled the government by narrowly losing with 54 supporting votes versus 55. The motion high- lighted factors in the budget that discriminate against lower socio-economic sectors. Pischon Lev, an organization that provides necessities to the poor, said it lately received 1,825 new requests for help — 20% more than in the corresponding period last year. Meanwhile, MK Idit Silman of Yamina said she was trying to alter the Lieberman decree which aims to deprive yungeleit of subsidies for child daycare unless they work. Wives of religious Zionist kollel men had complained to her that the measure impacted them to no lesser extent. It remains to be seen whether Silman will alter the gezeirah for the benefit of all yunge- leit, or only to help religious Zionist couples. YATED CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS • NYSHA 845-655-5678 • Hamaspik Theragen Upstate - 845-655-0600 Downstate - 718-266-9742 • Tri-County Care 844-504-8400 • Hamaspik Of Orange County 845-774-8400 • Hamaspik Of Rockland County 845-356-8400 • Hamaspik Of Kings County 718-387-8400 • Hamaspik Medicare Select 833-HAMASPIK / 833-426-2774 • Hamaspik Home Care 855-HAMASPIK / 855-426-2774 • Hamaspik Choice 855-552-4642 • Comfort Health Kings - 718-408-5400 Rockland - 845-503-0400 Orange - 845-774-0309 Hamaspik Central Point CARE CENTERED AROUND YOU 866-353-8400 HELP WANTED Accounts Receivable Rep Seeking an Accounts Receivable Representative for an Accounting Firm. Flexible hours. Located in BP. Great work environment. Good Pay. 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162 16 Cheshvan 5782 | October 22, 2021
man Mahmoud Abbas, Israel granted legal West Bank residency to 4,000 Palestinians.
These included 2,800 Palestinians who left Gaza before the Hamas takeover in 2007, spouses of West Bank Palestinians, and other categories.
The last such measure took place in 2008 and 2009, when 32,000 Arabs got residency rights in a diplomatic gesture to Abbas.
ISRAEL ASSASSINATES EX-SYRIAN MP
Syria has accused Israel of assassinat-ing Midhat Saleh, 54, an Israeli Druse Arab who served in the Syrian government after Israel jailed him for 12 years for terrorist activities. He was fatally shot while return-ing to his home at a Syrian village opposite the Israeli town of Majdal Shams where he was born.
After his term in the Syrian parliament, President Assad appointed him a personal advisor and head of the country’s Golan Of-fice.
Meanwhile, numerous Syrian and Irani-an-backed forces were killed and wounded in an Israeli airstrike in central Syria. Six Syrian soldiers died in an Israeli attack against an airport in the area a week earlier.
COVID CONTINUES TO DROP IN ISRAEL
Only 1,199 new coronavirus cases were diagnosed on Sunday, a massive drop from over 6,500 daily cases diagnosed a month earlier. The number of serious cases fell to 372 on Monday, 350 less that four weeks before. Israel’s death toll passed the 8,000-mark, with an average of 15 deaths a day this month.
On one day last week, there were no deaths in 24 hours for the first time during the fourth wave.
Daily cases have fallen to a three-month low, and Israel is considering expanding a “Green Class” program which lets children exposed to infected classmates be tested for the disease instead of having to go into quarantine.
DIGITAL GREEN PASSESAfter weeks of technical difficulties, Israe-
lis began using digital green passes to enter re-stricted businesses and venues. This will hope-fully make it harder to fake passes and reduce the tendency of guards to barely glance at cards and let people through.
The Health Ministry was concerned over a drop in vaccinations, and warned that this might precipitate a fifth wave. Doctors were also con-cerned that due to a low turnout for flu vaccines, Israel’s hospitals may become overwhelmed by flu over winter.
The situation was not alleviated by the declaration of MK Gadi Yevarkan of Likud that a “terrible incitement” against the unvac-cinated led him to fear that “people might be murdered,” and he decided not to take a second vaccination to identify with their cause.
Meanwhile, a study by the Taub Center for Social Policy Studies found that 13.7% of Is-raelis were infected with Covid since the start of the pandemic until September, compared to 31% of chareidim.
Covid expert Eran Segal of the Weizmann Institute said this might be due to the large num-ber of chareidi children not eligible for vac-cines, and to large chareidi families.
MEDICAL INTERNS AND RESIDENTS RESIGN
Hundreds of medical interns and resi-dents resigned from their hospital jobs, complaining of oppressive shifts of up to 26 hours with few breaks to attend to their personal needs. The resignations were to take effect in two weeks. They wanted to see the superior conditions promised by the Health Ministry in writing before changing their minds.
At the same time, Israel introduced two plans. One is to encourage the immigration of medical professionals by reducing the exhaustive red tape currently required for their licensing in Israel and by providing fast-track training and employment oppor-tunities.
A second plan involves granting visas
for foreign tech workers to augment Isra-el’s shortage of 13,000 to 20,000 engineers and hi-tech experts.
WHEN WILL TOURISTS BE LET IN?
Israel has tentatively decided to reopen to vaccinated tourists from November 1, but still needs to decide what to do about many Americans who not have digital green pass certificates. Wrangling between the health and tourism ministries has held up an official announcement.
The Health Ministry’s Dr. Sharon Alroy-Prei spoke of letting in vaccinated tourists from the US with certificates of vaccination even without a digital pass. She said she pre-ferred keeping a requirement for PCR testing before boarding a plane and after landing.
There was also a possibility that Ameri-cans without digital passes may need to fill out forms on Israel’s Health Ministry website to get individual approval.
So far, tourists have only been allowed to come in organized groups on condition that they travel in capsules and avoid mingling with the Israeli public.
LOW RISK OF HEART INFLAMMATION
An Israeli study published in the New England Journal of Medicine determined that the risk of developing myocarditis (a heart inflammation) after taking the Pfizer vaccine is extremely low.
It found myocarditis in the overall Israeli population occurring at a rate of approxi-mately 1 per 26,000 males and 1 per 218,000 females after a second vaccine dose, with the highest risk again among young male recipi-ents.
The risk per 100,000 persons after the second vaccine dose ranged from 0 to 15.1, and the overall risk among all persons stud-ied was 2.7/100,000, with only one death re-ported.
The study concluded that “the incidence of myocarditis, although low, increased after the receipt of the BNT162b2 vaccine, par-
ticularly after the second dose among young male recipients. The clinical presentation of myocarditis after vaccination was usually mild.”
A companion article by another Israeli group in the same journal cited an overall risk of 2.1 cases per 100,000 persons after at least one dose of the vaccine.
RAAM THREATENS TO TOPPLE GOVERNMENT
The United Arab List (Raam) threatened to topple the coalition until it surrenders to its demand to pass legislation to connect tens of thousands of illegal Arab and Bedouin struc-tures to the national electricity grid.
MK Walid Taha, chairman of the Knes-set Interior Committee, canceled all meetings set to legislate part of the economic arrange-ments bill accompanying the state budget un-til the coalition agreed to his party’s demand. The budget must be legislated by November 14 to prevent early elections.
Regavim, a rightwing organization estab-lished to protect Israeli land, warned that “this extortionate bill endangers the rule of law and national planning and construction policy” by seeking “to connect not only existing illegal structures, but any and all illegal structures that will be built in the future. It is clear that approval of this law will result in a surge in illegal construction.”
A no-confidence motion of Shas against the government and its budget almost toppled the government by narrowly losing with 54 supporting votes versus 55. The motion high-lighted factors in the budget that discriminate against lower socio-economic sectors.
Pischon Lev, an organization that provides necessities to the poor, said it lately received 1,825 new requests for help — 20% more than in the corresponding period last year.
Meanwhile, MK Idit Silman of Yamina said she was trying to alter the Lieberman decree which aims to deprive yungeleit of subsidies for child daycare unless they work. Wives of religious Zionist kollel men had complained to her that the measure impacted them to no lesser extent.
It remains to be seen whether Silman will alter the gezeirah for the benefit of all yunge-leit, or only to help religious Zionist couples.
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