The coronavirus cabinet on Tuesday decided that Israelis no longer need special permission to enter the country.
The decision effectively ends the state’s liberation committee.
The plan will increase the daily number of passengers arriving from 200 to 3,000 while those who have been vaccinated against COVID-19 abroad will be free from loneliness.
While vaccinated people still have to get COVID tested into the country, unvaccinated travelers must put down an investment for a tracking package to separate themselves at home and or take it to an isolation facility run by the state.
Israel’s chief coronavirus health officer, Dr. Nachman Ash said the proposed picture did not adequately address the risk of people carrying new COVID changes entering Israel. He advocated a ban from Israel for holiday purposes after the Pesach holiday.
The virus cabinet also plans to closely monitor Israelis returning from countries that have reported the spread of new coronavirus mutations, so that the police can keep a close eye on them.
The state will establish investigators along with police officers to help enforce home isolation. The cabinet will continue to scrutinize the police proposal to double the fine for violating home quarantine from NIS 5,000 to NIS 10,000.
At the same time. The government voted Monday to open event halls and restaurants starting next week as Israel continued to reopen its economy.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Health Minister Yuli Edelstein also agreed that schools will begin classroom learning for grades 7 to 10 starting next Sunday.