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Brits and Israelis are very different in how we respond to Covid

In Britain, significant numbers believe that restrictions are an assault on freedom by the state — whereas in Israel the state is seen as having the interests of people at heart

August 19, 2021 17:21
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Members of the public queue outside to receive the Pfizer-BioNTech Covid-19 vaccine at a temporary Covid-19 vaccine centre at the Tate Modern in central London on July 16, 2021. (Photo by Tolga Akmen / AFP) (Photo by TOLGA AKMEN/AFP via Getty Images)
3 min read

Having spent most of the pandemic in Israel, I’ve been able to compare its attitudes with those expressed in Britain.

Until a couple of months ago, Israel’s assumption was that its world-beating vaccination programme had cracked the problem. The country opened up, ending many of its Covid-19 restrictions.

Then disaster struck through the vastly more infectious Delta variant — against which the vaccine has proved less effective. It’s unclear if that’s due to the variant’s properties or because Israel vaccinated so early that the protection this offered has waned, as Pfizer warned it might.

With around one million Israelis remaining unvaccinated, the virus stormed out of control. The Israeli government is currently struggling to avoid imposing another draconian lockdown as the number of serious cases — far fewer than among the unvaccinated, but still problematic if infections carry on increasing exponentially — continues to rise towards levels which may overwhelm the hospitals.