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Israel Passes Law to Limit Protests during 'Virus Emergency'

Israel's parliament approved a law early Wednesday restricting demonstrations as part of a coronavirus-related state of emergency, that critics say is aimed at silencing protests against Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

The law, which passed its final reading by 46 votes to 38, was meant to be part of a slew of measures approved by parliament on Friday tightening a second nationwide lockdown. 

But debate on the measure was put off as the government struggled to secure the necessary votes amid an opposition outcry and a protest outside parliament on Tuesday.

The lockdown, which went into force on September 18, shutters the majority of workplaces, markets, places of worship, schools and cultural venues.

It also bans journeys of more than a kilometre (0.6 miles) from home, other than for essential purposes such as buying food and medicine or receiving medical treatment. 

The new law gives the government powers to declare a "special emergency caused by the coronavirus pandemic" for renewable periods of one week.

During that time, the one-kilometre limit on travel will apply to demonstrations, and there will also be restrictions on numbers.

The state of emergency can be declared only during a lockdown.

The government has yet to use those powers, but with more than 237,000 coronavirus infections and 1,528 deaths in a population of nine million, Israel currently has the world's highest weekly infection rate per capita.

Meir Cohen of main opposition party Yesh Atid-Telem condemned the new controls on demonstrations as a "slippery slope".

Yair Golan of the leftwing Meretz party warned that the new law "won't stop the demonstrations."

"The anger growing in the streets will find its way out," he said.

In recent months, weekly protests have been held outside Netanyahu's Jerusalem residence demanding that he quit over his management of the pandemic and his ongoing trial on corruption charges.

On Tuesday, Netanyahu said that the current lockdown, originally set to end on October 10, would last "no less than a month, and maybe much more time than that."

Health Minister Yuli Edelstein said the government had learned from "mistakes" in its swift reopening of the educational system and economy following a first lockdown earlier this year.

"The opening of the economy and our lives will be gradual and slow," he told public broadcaster Kan.

Source: Agence France Presse


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