Mon 16 March 2020:
As the state of emergency continues in the West Bank and Israel in the wake of the outbreak of coronavirus, Palestinians are worried about their relatives held in Israeli prisons.
The fears of an outbreak of the virus in the prisons were compounded by reports that an inmate at the Ashkelon prison was removed as a precaution after being examined by an Israeli doctor who suspected him of being infected.
According to the Palestinian Prisoner Society (PPS), 19 out of 35 prisoners detained with the inmate in the same department were immediately isolated on Friday.
In Al-Maskobiya prison in Jerusalem, Israeli authorities have isolated 100 prisoners after an officer was suspected of contracting the virus.
Authorities told a PPS lawyer that the quarantine has ended as the tests were negative, Sarahneh said.
The group said 200 Palestinian prisoners are suffering from chronic diseases, which largely threatens their lives if the virus spreads in prisons.
According to Palestinian authorities, 5,000 Palestinians, including women and children, are currently held in Israeli detention facilities.
Israeli Internal Security Minister Jela’ad Ardan has instructed the prison administration to prevent visits. The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) told Palestinian families that there will be no visits this month.
Israeli authorities have confirmed 214 cases of coronavirus so far in the country.
Palestinian Prime Minister Mohammad Shtayyeh on Saturday asked the Israeli authorities to immediately release the Palestinian prisoners languishing in the Israeli jails.
Shtayyeh asserted that the release should include child prisoners and those suffering from chronic diseases.
Infections were reported in the West Bank’s holy city of Bethlehem after a group of Greek tourists stayed at a hotel there.
The number of diagnosed cases in West Bank rose to 38 on Friday — 37 in Bethlehem and one in Tulkarm.
The Palestinian Ministry of Health said 4,000 people are subject to house quarantine, in addition to 60 in quarantine by the ministry.
The government completely closed Bethlehem to prevent the spread of the virus to other areas.
As a safety precaution, all schools and universities in the West Bank are temporarily closed and e-education has been adopted as an alternative to maintaining the continuity of the educational process until the end of emergency measures.
The government closed public places where gatherings take place, such as restaurants, wedding halls, and entertainment venues.
The Ministry of Religious Affairs asked the faithful to pray at home to avoid congregations.
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