Israel's Home Front Command lifted remaining assembly restrictions across the entire country, except for the frontline (Kav Ha'Omek) border communities, according to official announcements. Most of the country returns to the 'green' routine civil-defense status.
The Home Front Command has lifted all remaining gathering restrictions nationwide, with the exception of the frontline (Kav Ha'Omek) border communities, according to multiple official announcements this morning. The move returns most of the country to the Home Front Command's 'green' routine status, meaning normal activity resumes in schools, workplaces, and public gatherings across the rest of Israel.
As The Zioneer reported at 10:39 today, the initial announcement this morning explicitly stated restrictions were removed 'for the entire country except the frontline.' A correction to an earlier report that had overstated the scope—incorrectly claiming the frontline was included—was issued following fact-checking of the source material. The frontline communities remain under their existing partial-activity guidelines.
The decision follows a series of civil-defense adjustments over recent days, including the lifting of shelter-in-place orders across the north on Saturday and the removal of a 5,000-person gathering cap nationwide earlier this morning. The Home Front Command states that the changes reflect a reassessment of the current security threat level, though residents of frontline communities still face modified activity rules.
3 developments
- DevelopingHome Front Command lifts 5,000-person gathering cap nationwide effective Monday morning
- ConfirmedU.S. Embassy: Home Front Command eases restrictions nationwide except northern communities
- DevelopingHome Front Command lifts shelter orders for northern Israel
- StrongHome Front Command ends shelter restrictions in five Upper Galilee locations
Source and signal
- Internal intake
