1 January – Israel becomes the first country to reach the milestone of one million COVID-19 vaccinations, over 11% of the population, since the inoculation campaign began on 20 December 2020.[1]
5 January – The IsraeliCabinet agrees to tighten the nationwide lockdown by closing schools and non-essential shops for 14 days. The measures will come into force at midnight between Thursday and Friday.[3]
8 January – Another hearing of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu standing trial on charges of a litany of corruption accusations, including bribery, breach of trust, and fraud is postponed due to quarantine lockdown.[7]
9 January – Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu becomes the first Israeli to get a second dose of Pfizer's tozinameran vaccine as the country begins administering second doses of the vaccine to the public.[8]
19 January – Israel extends their third nationwide lockdown until January 31 due to the highest number of cases reported and announces the requirement all travelers to present a negative COVID-19 test result within 72 hours of arrival or face a fine of ₪ 2,500 ($772).[11]
22 January –
A family of four, with two children killed in Israeli airstrikes on five Syrian military targets in Hama, Syria, destroys five Syrian military sites.[12]
The first reinfection case of the South African 501.V2 variant is reported in a 57-year-old man who recently travelled to Turkey and who previously recovered from COVID-19.[21]
Israel announces that it will ease its lockdown measures beginning February 7. People will no longer be restricted to within one kilometer of their homes, many services will be allowed to operate, and all national parks will reopen. However, international borders will remain closed until February 20.[26]
8 February –
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu appears in the Jerusalem District Court for a hearing in his corruption trial and formally denies the charges against him.[27]
Greek Prime MinisterKyriakos Mitsotakis and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu sign an accord that would allow vaccinated travellers to visit freely between the two countries without any restrictions in order to revive their battered tourism sector.[28]
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu pleads not guilty to charges of bribery, breach of trust and fraud at the Jerusalem District Court.[29]
14 February – Cypriot PresidentNicos Anastasiades and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announce an agreement to allow vaccinated travelers to travel between the countries without the need to quarantine in order to restore their countries' tourism industries.[31]
15 February – Six foreign nationals killed in Israeli airstrikes on the Syrian Army's 4th Armoured Division headquarters and Iranian weapons and missile depots near Damascus, Syria.[32]
The first shipment of the Sputnik Vvaccine donated by Russia arrives in Gaza after Israel allows the shipment of 1,000 vaccines, which was previously blocked.[35]
More than half of Israel's Mediterranean coastline is contaminated by tar from oil spilled at sea, causing a major ecological disaster including widespread death of marine and coastal wildlife and illness to a number of volunteers who assist with clean up on the beaches. The Israel Nature and Parks Authority calls the spill "one of the most serious ecological disasters" in the country’s history.[38]
The Health Ministry reports that data of COVID-19 vaccines are 99.2% effective against serious illness, reduce mortality by 95.8% and decrease the chance of hospitalization by 98.9%.[39]
21 February – Israel reopens many sectors of their economy as part of an easing of lockdown restrictions, with the exception of access to leisure sites is limited to people who have received a vaccine or who have recovered from COVID-19.[40]
26 February – An explosion occurs on the Israeli-owned cargo shipMV Helios Ray in the Gulf of Oman with no injuries reported of the ship's crew with Iran suspected as being responsible.[41]
Three Palestinian fishermen are killed in an explosion off the coast of Gaza. The blast is caused by an unknown weapon, suspected to be a rocket.[43]
Israel announces the reopening of restaurants, bars, and other entertainment venues for the vaccinated with some middle-school reopened in some areas and university classes also resume for the vaccinated. Israeli citizens are also allowed to return to Israel without any special permissions.[44]
11 March – U.S. and Arab officials disclose the confirmation of Israeli naval vessels clandestinely operating against Iranian vessels in the Persian Gulf, Mediterranean Sea and Red Sea transporting of oil fuel and weaponry to Syria since 2019. At least twelve Iranian vessels have been attacked with limpet mines, according to U.S. officials.[46]
Israeli media claims that Mossad is responsible for a cyber attack on the Natanz nuclear facility in Iran that caused a blackout.[55]
An Israeli study finds that the Pfizer–BioNTech vaccine may be less effective against the South African variant when compared to other strains of the virus.[56]
13 April – A missile strikes the Israeli-owned cargo ship MV Hyperion Ray off the coast of the United Arab Emirates. Iran is suspected as being responsible.[57]
15 April – Israeli airstrikes hit an Hamas armaments production facility and a weapon smuggling tunnel in the Gaza Strip in retaliation for rocket attacks.[58]
18 April – The outdoor mask mandate is lifted and schools fully reopened following the reduction of COVID-19 cases and majority vaccination, with the exception of mandatory masks in indoor public spaces.[59]
23 April – More than 120 people are injured in clashes in Jerusalem between ultra-nationalist Jewish demonstrators (including Lehava extremists), Palestinian protestors, and Israel Police in response to a TikTok video showing Palestinians assaulting members of the Jerusalem ultra-Orthodox community.[61]
24 April – Israel is hit by at least 35 Hamas rockets amidst yesterday's clashes between far-right Jewish demonstrators and Palestinians in Jerusalem. Israel retaliates with shelling of the Gaza Strip.[62]
PresidentMahmoud Abbas announces the postponement of the election scheduled for May 22 until further notice, after the government of Israel allegedly rejected the holding of the election in East Jerusalem. Abbas announces that the election cannot be held without the participation of the disputed area.[66]
May
2 May – The Jerusalem District Court orders at least six families residing in the Sheikh Jarrah neighborhood in East Jerusalem to vacate their homes, following decades of litigation by Jewish settler organizations claiming they are the rightful owners of the property. Hamas condemns this ruling as "dangerous, racist behavior", threatening retaliation.[67][68]
5 May –
Israel launches missiles at Masyaf, Syria, killing one person and injuring six others. Several more missiles are intercepted, including one which reached the port city of Latakia.[69][70]
Israeli President Reuven Rivlin taps Yair Lapid, leader of the oppositional centrist party Yesh Atid, to form a new government after Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu failed to form one yesterday.[71]
9 May – The Israeli Supreme Court agrees to delay its ruling on whether Palestinian residents in East Jerusalem's Sheikh Jarrah neighborhood can be evicted to make way for Jewish settlers to later this month, following a series of violent clashes between Israeli police and Palestinian protesters over this issue.[76]
10 May – Barrages of rockets are launched from Gaza at Israel with seven rockets landing in Jerusalem, injuring one person. Israel retaliates with airstrikes at Gaza killing 24, including nine children and a Hamas leader, and injuring 103.[77]
11 May –
Eight people killed and several others injured in Israeli airstrikes at the Gaza Strip, bringing the total death toll from the strikes to 32, and destroying the Hanadi Tower. Hamas retaliates with a barrage of rocket launches towards Israel, reaching as far as Tel Aviv, killing three people.[78]
An Israeli-Arab man is killed and two more are wounded after a Jewish gunman opens fire against a group of protestors in Lod.[79]
37 killed in Israeli airstrikes on the Gaza Strip, thereby bringing the death toll to 69 with 390 injured. Among the victims are a five-year-old child and their parents, who died when a residential building collapsed, while five more are farmers killed at their farms. The number of children killed rises to seventeen. The main Palestinian headquarters and all of the police stations in Gaza are destroyed by the strikes. Three killed in protests in the West Bank.[84]
Three additional people are killed by Hamas' rockets in Lod, while an IDF soldier is killed as a military jeep outside Gaza is bombed, thereby bringing the Israeli death toll to seven.[85]
The Israel Defense Forces says that it has conducted a "complex and first-of-its-kind operation" in the Gaza Strip, killing several senior members of Hamas.[86][87]
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu declares a state of emergency in the city of Lod following rioting between Arabs and Jews. It is the first use of emergency powers over an Arab community in Israel since 1966.[88]
In Milwaukee, protesters gather near The Calling sculpture in opposition to Israel's occupation.[91]
12 May –
The death toll from the airstrikes in the Gaza Strip increases to 113 people, with 600 injured. The IDF launches multiple raids on Rafah with 35 Palestinian injured in protests continue in the West Bank. The number of children killed also increases to 31.[92]
The Israel Defense Forces says that it has deployed two infantry units and an armoured unit to the border on the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip, and that a ground operation inside Gaza will be submitted to military chiefs later today, ahead of a potential approval by the Israeli government.[93]
Israeli strikes destroy Hamas' internal security headquarters and Gaza's central bank, as the spokesman of the al-Qassam Brigades, the armed wing of Hamas, says that the group has launched "massive rocket strikes", larger than any launched on Israel since the 1948 Arab–Israeli War.[94]
Leader of the right-wingYamina coalition Naftali Bennett calls off talks with oppositional leader Yair Lapid to form a new government in light of escalating violence. He instead voices his support for a unity government.[96]
14 May –
The death toll from Israeli airstrikes and shellings on Gaza increases to 137 people with more than 920 injured. The Shati refugee camp is hit by bombings, resulting in the death of ten people, including eight children, thereby bringing the number of children killed to 36. The death toll in Israel rises to nine people killed, including a six-year-old boy. The International Criminal Court says that individuals involved in the conflict may be targeted by an investigation into war crimes. Violence also continues in the West Bank, with Israeli settlers attacking Palestinian homes in the city of Hebron, while eleven protestors in the West Bank are shot dead by soldiers, bringing the number of Palestinian protestors killed there to 15.[97]
Two Lebanese men are killed during protests at the border against Israeli soldiers.[97]
ItalianHealth MinisterRoberto Speranza signs a decree that removes quarantine rules for COVID-19 negative testing Israeli travelers. The decree will take effect on May 16.[98]
Jordan police disperse protesters who are trying to reach the Allenby Bridge near the border with Israel. Additionally, protesters from Lebanon also reach the Israeli border.[100][101]
A court in France bans pro-Palestinian protests planned in Paris. However, activists say that protests will go as planned.[103]
15 May –
The death toll from Israeli airstrikes on the al-Shati and Bureij refugee camps Gaza rises to 145 people with 950 injured, including 41 children. Two protesters are killed in the West Bank. The headquarters of many media organizations in Gaza, including Al Jazeera and the Associated Press, are destroyed by bombings. An Israeli man is killed by a rocket in Ramat Gan, in Tel Aviv District, another person is also killed in another city, bringing the death toll there to 10.[104]
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says that airstrikes on Gaza will continue "as long as needed". He also warns Hamas leaders not to hide and that nobody is immune.[105]
Police in Paris, France, use tear gas and water cannons against pro-Palestinian protesters. This comes a day after a French court banned protests in support of Palestine.[108]
42 killed in Gaza City in Israel airstrikes with the total death toll rising to 192 people, including 58 children and 34 women.[115]
Hamas fires over 190 rockets at southern Israel, damaging numerous buildings, including a synagogue. Approximately 3,000 rockets have been fired in the past week.[116]
In Berlin, violent confrontations break out during a protest against Israeli airstrikes in the Gaza Strip, with an Israeli TV reporter being attacked.[120]
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says that he has ordered the Israel Defense Forces to continue strikes in Gaza, including Hamas targets.[122]
The death toll in Gaza from Israeli airstrikes rises to 212 people, including 61 children.[123]
The offices of the Qatar branch of the Red Crescent Society is destroyed by an Israeli air strike, killing two Palestinians and wounding ten others. The Qatari Foreign Ministry condemns the attack.[125]
The Israeli military shells southern Lebanon after several Grad-type rockets were fired at Israel.[126]
A Hamas rocket kills two Thai workers and injures ten others in southern Israel, thereby bringing the death toll in the country to 12.[128]
The death toll from the Israeli airstrikes in Gaza rise to at least 217 Palestinians killed, including 63 children. About 1,500 others have been wounded. Gaza's main COVID-19 laboratory is destroyed by a strike, stopping all COVID-19 tests as a result. Four more protesters are also killed in the West Bank.[129]
The IDF reports the death of 160 Hamas and Islamic Jihad members. However, the deaths are not confirmed by either the groups or Palestinian authorities, who reported a lower number of militants killed.[130]
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Palestinian officials say that fighting between Israel and Palestine will continue while working toward a ceasefire.[136]
Israel and Hamas agree to a ceasefire. The past 11 days of conflict have killed 232 people in Gaza and 11 in Israel. Egypt agrees to observe the implementation of the ceasefire.[143]
In MidtownManhattan, pro-Palestine and pro-Israel protesters clash at Times Square despite a ceasefire being announced between Israel and Hamas militants. One protester suffers a minor burn after fireworks were thrown from a car.[145]
Ten more bodies are found under the rubble of bombed buildings in Gaza, thereby bringing the Palestinian death toll to 243. Despite this, the ceasefire agreed by Israel and Hamas begins.[148]
Israeli security forces fire stun grenades and rubber bullets at Palestinians attending Friday prayers at Al-Aqsa Mosque, and they also hit journalists at the scene with batons, injuring at least 20 people.[149]
Israeli police announce they have arrested over 1,550 demonstrators, most of them Palestinians, since May 9 for allegedly disrupting the peace, and that they will arrest hundreds more in the upcoming days.[155]
The UN Human Rights Council authorizes an open-ended investigation into human rights violations committed during the conflict. The Palestinian National Authority welcomes the decision, while Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu condemns it as "yet another example of the UN Human Rights Council’s blatant anti-Israel obsession," and declares that Israel will not cooperate with the probe.[159]
28 May – Zakaria Hamayel, a 28-year-old Palestinian man is shot and killed by Israeli forces during a protest near Nablus.[160][161]
10–21 May – Israel conducts aerial attacks dubbed "Operation Guardian of the Walls" in response to Hamas rocket attacks into Israeli territory – during the eleven-day campaign, more than 4,360 rockets and mortar shells are fired at Israel, of which 3,573 penetrate Israeli airspace, about 680 fall short inside the Gaza Strip and about 280 fall into the sea; the Iron Dome aerial defense system intercepts about 90% of the rocket fire; eleven Israeli civilians are directly killed by the rocket and mortar fire, two die as they run for shelter, several hundred are injured, and one soldier is killed when an anti-tank rocket hit his jeep; the rocket attacks force millions of civilians into bomb shelters and disrupt routine daily life throughout the country.[162][163]
10–17 May – Arab-Israeli protests and riots occur, particularly in towns with large Arab populations, and in intercommunal violence, Arab rioters set ten synagogues and 112 Jewish homes on fire, loot 386 Jewish homes and damaged another 673, and set 849 Jewish cars on fire and there are 5,018 recorded instances of stone-throwing against Jews; Jewish rioters damaged 13 Arab homes and set 13 Arab cars on fire, and there are 41 recorded instances of stone-throwing against Arabs; several people from both communities are severely injured and two die.[164][165]
31 May – U.S. SenatorLindsey Graham (R-SC) meets with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Jerusalem amidst speculation that a new government will be formed in Israel. During the meeting, both men discussed protecting Israel from future Hamas attacks.[171][172]
A Likud source says that incumbent Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will leave office on June 9, the day Naftali Bennett is scheduled to be sworn in.[179]
4 June –
Pro-Palestine protesters in the U.S. gather at the Port of Oakland to attempt to block an Israeli cargo ship from entering the port. Protesters also call for an economic boycott of Israel following the 11-day conflict.[180]
At least 23 runners in East Jerusalem are injured after Israeli police fired tear gas and stun grenades at people participating in a 3.5 km (2.2 mi)-run organized to show solidarity with Palestinian families facing eviction in Sheikh Jarrah.[181]
6 June –
A vaccination campaign for 600,000 children between the ages of 12 and 16 begins, with the first priority being children who are at greater risk of experiencing severe symptoms from COVID-19 and children from families who are expected to travel abroad.[182]
Israeli police arrest Sheikh Jarrah activists Muna and Mohammed El-Kurd, the former for allegedly participating in riots, and the latter after he turned himself in following a police summons. Both of them were released separately.[183]
7 June –
A pro-settler march that was scheduled for Thursday and would have traveled through sensitive sites in East Jerusalem is canceled after Israeli police refused to authorize it. However, the police said they would review a petition calling for the march to be rescheduled. The cancellation follows a warning from Hamas senior leader Khalil al-Hayya that the march could lead to renewed violence.[184]
10 June – Three Palestinians killed and one injured in an IDF raid on a West Bank residence to arrest two Palestinians suspected of perpetrating a recent shooting attack with one of the suspects shot dead. Palestinian security officers arrive and reportedly open fire on the Israeli soldiers, with two of the Palestinian officers killed and a third is wounded.[186]
The Health Ministry repeals the requirement for vaccinated adults in Israel to wear masks in most circumstances, as case numbers of COVID-19 fall to their lowest numbers since the start of the national vaccination campaign in December.[190]
Seventeen Palestinians are arrested and 33 more are injured after Israeli police fire tear gas and rubber bullets at Palestinians protesting at the Damascus Gate over the procession of a march called Dance of Flags through Jerusalem's Old City.[191]
Mediators renew their push for another ceasefire between Israel and Hamas following the airstrikes.[194]
17 June –
Further Israeli airstrikes are conducted at sites near Beit Lahia and Gaza City targeting militias and a civil administration building in Jabalia and an agriculture field near Khan Yunis. Hamas claims on Al-Aqsa TV that it downed an Israelidrone. No casualties were reported.[195]
The Palestinian Authority cancels a planned vaccine exchange with Israel involving at least one million doses of the Pfizer vaccine, saying the first batch of doses Israel was going to send were near expiration. The swap was previously announced earlier in the day.[197]
At least 17 Palestinians are injured and 10 arrested after Israeli police stormed Al-Aqsa Mosque to break up a rally held in response to videos of far-right marchers insulting the Islamic prophet Muhammad during the Dance of Flags on Tuesday. A further 47 are injured when the IDF fired tear gas and rubber bullets at demostrators near Beita in the occupied West Bank protesting the recent establishment of a military outpost near the town.[198]
24 June – During a state visit to Israel, Honduran PresidentJuan Orlando Hernández opens his country's embassy to Israel in Jerusalem, the fourth country in recent years to do so.[203]
25 June – Health authorities reintroduce the requirement to wear face masks in all closed spaces as the number of COVID-19 cases rise again, primarily among unvaccinated children with the spread of the highly contagious Delta variant of the COVID-19 virus.[204][205]
27 June
The government appoints a three-member commission led by former chief justice Miriam Naor to investigate the disaster at Mount Meron in April, which left 45 people dead and over 150 wounded.[206]
In response to arson balloons launched from the Gaza Strip into Israel, the Israeli Air Force launches airstrikes on Hamas military targets in Gaza.[211]
8 July – Israel reports its first case of the SARS-CoV-2 Delta variant in a vaccinated woman who returned to the country from abroad.[216]
9 July –
More than 370 Palestinians are injured after Israeli security forces opened fire on demonstrators protesting the presence of an illegal outpost near Beita in the occupied West Bank. Thirty-one of those injured were hit with live ammunition. Dozens more are injured in similar confrontations in Kafr Qaddum, Beit Dajan, and Hebron, with demonstrators in Hebron protesting the presence of settlements in the Masafer Yatta area.[217]
The IsraeliMinistry of Health announces that all visitors who are traveling to Israel, including vaccinated individuals, will be required to quarantine for 24 hours or receive a negative COVID-19 test beginning on July 16.[218]
11 July –
The High Court rules that a provision of the Surrogacy Law, which prevents single men and same-sex couples from entering into a surrogacy arrangement must be amended to remove the restriction.[219]
12 July – Israel becomes the first country in the world to offer a booster shot of the COVID-19 vaccine for immunocompromised adults. The decision comes as the Lineage B.1.617Delta variant continues to spread in the country.[222]
16 July – The Ministry of Health announces that all travel to Spain and Kyrgyzstan will be banned amid an increase in the number of COVID-19 cases. The order will be in effect on July 23.[225]
18 July – A scandal uncovered by media organizations revealed that the Pegasus spyware sold by the Israeli firm NSO to several countries was used to spy on activists, journalists, lawyers and politicians.[226]
29 July – Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett announces that a booster shot will be offered for people aged 60, making Israel the first country to do so.[237]
COVID-19 pandemic in Israel: Israel begins giving a third dose of the vaccine against COVID-19 to people above 60 in light of an outbreak of the Delta variant of the virus.[242]
Lebanese Druze villagers confront the Hezbollah rocket-launch convoy after it fires at Israel, accusing the militant group of endangering them by firing projectiles near civilian houses. The Lebanese Army later confiscates the launcher and arrests four suspects.[247][248]
8 August – Restrictions renewed by the government come into effect to slow the spread of the Delta variant of the COVID-19 virus and include expanding proof of vaccine and mask-wearing requirements for some gatherings, and a shift back to more remote work, quarantines, and travel restrictions.[249][250]
12 August COVID-19 pandemic in Israel: Israel begins giving a third dose of the vaccine against COVID-19 to people above 50.[251]
Germany reclassifies Israel as "high risk" COVID-19 areas, triggering mandatory 10-day quarantines for unvaccinated travellers.[254]
14 August – Israel issues a strong protest and downgrades its diplomatic representation to Poland following the enactment in Poland of a law that establishes a 30-year limit on administrative challenges to private property claims and effectively prevents restitution to heirs of property stolen by the Nazis in the Holocaust.[255]
15–17 August – Wildfires rage in the outskirts of Jerusalem, burning some 6,200 acres of forest in three days.[256][257]
16 August –
Four Palestinians are killed and another is seriously injured after an undercover branch of the Israel Border Police raided a refugee camp in Jenin in the occupied West Bank. The raid, which was organized to arrest a suspected Hamas member, resulted in the highest death toll in the area in months.[258]
The number of people over the age of 50 who have received a booster COVID-19 vaccine dose in Israel reaches one million.[259]
Israel reports 8,716 new cases of COVID-19 in the past 24 hours, which is the highest single-day total of new cases since February 1.[261]
18 August – Israel begins to require people over the age of 3 to show their vaccination certificate, proof of a negative test result to enter indoor places other than shopping malls and department stores. Additionally, crowd size restrictions at events and venues limited to one person per 7 square metres (75 sq ft).[262]
Israel launches antibodyCOVID-19 testing for 1.4 million children between the ages of 3 and 12 as part of a study to measure the extent to which COVID-19 spread undetected among children in the past 18 months.[265]
Israel expands booster dose eligibility to all people over the age of 12 who received their second dose of the COVID-19 vaccine at least five months ago.[272]
30 August – Ami Omer Dadaon wins his second medal, the gold medal for swimming in the men's 200 m freestyle S4.[273]
2 September – Ami Omer Dadaon wins his second gold medal and third medal overall for swimming in the men's 50 m freestyle S4.[275]
24 August – Israel surpasses one million cases of COVID-19.[276]
26 August – The Israeli Supreme Court rejects a claim by Moroccan immigrants to Israel that they be recognized as Holocaust victims who suffered under the Vichy race laws in Morocco during World War II and be granted state compensation payments, on the grounds that Moroccan authorities acted against Jews on their own accord, without being forced to do so by Nazi Germany.[277]
Over 2.4 million children in Israel return to school on the start of the new academic year with mandatory masks and COVID-19 testing aimed at reducing an increase in the number of COVID-19 cases in the highly-vaccinated country primarily caused by the highly transmissible Delta variant.[282][283]
The head of Israel's Biological Institute, Professor Shmuel Shapira, reveals that midway through vaccine development, its office was requested by the government of then-Prime MinisterBenjamin Netanyahu to suspend development of a locally developed vaccine.[284]
2 September – Israeli soldiers open fire on Palestinians protesting against Israel's 14-year blockade of the Gaza Strip, killing one and injuring 15 others.[285]
12 September – An apartment building in Holon collapses, destroying the homes of 36 families but without any casualties, the building having been evacuated the previous day.[286]
Five members of Hamas are killed in Biddu, Jerusalem, and two more are killed in Burqin the West Bank during an Israeli operation to arrest operatives suspected of planning a series of terrorist attacks in Israel. Two soldiers were injured in one raid.[291]
Three Palestinians are killed, two are injured and two more are arrested by Israeli soldiers during armed confrontations in the West Bank.[294]
Israeli Foreign Minister Yair Lapid travels to Bahrain for the first official visit by an Israeli cabinet member to the Gulf kingdom since the countries established diplomatic ties last year.[295]
October
3 October – Israel introduces a new rule that requires booster dose of the COVID-19 vaccine to be considered fully vaccinated for everyone aged 12 and older in "Green Pass", becoming the first country to do so.[296]
4 October –
Prime Minister Bennett reveals that Mossad kidnapped an Iranian general in Syria to uncover information on the whereabouts of missing pilot Ron Arad.[297]
Police in Cyprus arrest a suspect believed to be "planning attacks against Israeli people". Israel has accused Iran of orchestrating the plot, although Iran has denied the allegations. Other reports suggest that the target of the plot was businessman Teddy Sagi and could be linked to business disputes involving Sagi.[298]
6 October – During a state visit to Ukraine, Israeli President Isaac Herzog, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, and German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier attend the inauguration of a memorial to victims of Babyn Yar on the 80th anniversary of the Nazi massacre of 33,000 Jews in a ravine near Kiev in September 1941.[299]
Israel reopens its borders to vaccinated international travellers for the first time since March 2020, where they must have received two doses of any WHO-approved vaccine, a booster dose within the past six months, or only one dose if they have recovered from COVID-19.[314]
3 November – The U.S. Commerce Department adds Israeli spyware firms Candiru and NSO Group to its trade blacklist for selling their services and tools to foreign governments to spy on government officials and journalists, and for trafficking tools used to hack computer networks respectively.[315]
5 November – After a marathon and often acrimonious session, the Knesset passes the 2021 and 2022 state budgets, the country's first approved national budgets in three and half years, and avoids triggering another round of early elections as a result.[316][317]
8 November – During a high-level state visit to Israel, Colombian Defense MinisterDiego Molano declares Iran to be an enemy of Colombia despite both nations continuing to maintain diplomatic relations.[318]
10 November – Israel's pandemic advisory board approves the usage of the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine for children between the ages of 5 and 11 years old.[319]
11 November – Israel begins the world's first nationwide COVID-19 drill named "Omega Drill" consisting of three sessions that will test the country's preparation for the possible outbreak of a new and more lethal variant of the virus.[320]
The COVID-19 vaccination campaign for children aged 5–11 begins, seeking to curtail the spread of COVID-19 in schools and close the main remaining gap in the country's push for national immunity from the pandemic.[327]
26 November – Israel reports its first case of the Omicron variant in a person who travelled from Malawi.[332]
28 November – Israel closes its borders to all foreigners and requires citizens who have travelled outside the country to quarantine for three days for fully vaccinated people and seven days for unvaccinated people as part of an effort to reduce the spread of the Omicron variant.[333]
Israeli Air Forcewarplanes bomb the Port of Latakia, Syria's main seaport with at least five explosions reported, with a Syrian military official stating that several missiles struck the container area of the port. It is the first Israeli attack on the facility through which Iran and Hezbollah import weapons into Syria.[338]
10 December – A man is killed and others are wounded as Israeli soldiers open fire on a group of Palestinian people protesting against Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank.[339]
14 December – Researchers from Tel Aviv University, Sheba Medical Center and from institutes in Europe and the United States announce that they have uncovered a mechanism that may unlock a way to delay or reverse the causes of the neurodegenerative diseaseALS, for which there is currently no treatment.[346]
An Israeli man is killed, and two others are injured, in a shooting near Homesh in the northern West Bank by gunmen suspected to belong to the Palestinian Islamic Jihad terror group.[348][349]
17 December –
Israeli settlers burst into several villages in the occupied West Bank, beating and injuring at least two people.[350]
Anastasia Gorbenko wins the first gold medal for Israel at the World Swimming Championships for the 50-meter breaststroke, followed by a second gold medal in the 100-meter individual medley two days later.[351]
18 December – Ukrainian ambassador to Israel Yevhen Korniychuk says that Ukraine might recognizeJerusalem as the capital of Israel.[352]
20 December –
Israeli Defense Forces report that they have arrested more than 100 members of the PalestinianIslamist organization Hamas, amid a recent increase in tensions.[353]
The Carmel storm hits Israel with heavy rainfall and strong winds.[354]
21 December – The Health ministry recommends that Israelis over the age of 60 years and healthcare workers should receive a fourth dose of the COVID-19 vaccine, becoming the world's first country to administer a fourth dose of the vaccine. The move is welcomed by Prime MinisterNaftali Bennett.[356]
22 December – The Soroka Medical Center in Beersheba clarifies that the man thought to be Israel's first Omicron death had actually had the SARS-CoV-2 Delta variant, following the final laboratory results regarding his condition.[359]
25 December – The Israeli government finalizes an agreement with Pfizer to purchase 100,000 courses of the anti-viral drug Paxlovid for high-risk patients over the age of 12 years, with delivery expected to begin in one week.[361]
The health ministry reduces the interval between the second dose and booster dose of the COVID-19 vaccine to three months, citing concerns about the spread of the Omicron variant.[364]
An outbreak of H5N1 avian influenza in Northern Israel kills 5,200 of migratory cranes, and hundreds of thousands of domestic poultry are culled in a bid to halt the spread of the disease.[365]
28 December – Syrian state media reports that Israel has bombed the Port of Latakia, the second airstrike on the facility this month. Secondary explosions are believed to be from Iranian munitions stored at the facility.[366]
The Central Bureau of Statistics releases data showing that 9.449 million people live in Israel at the end of 2021, of whom 6.982 million (74%) are Jewish, 1.99 million (21%) are Arab and 472,000 (5%) are neither.[368][369]
30 December – Israel extends fourth doses of the COVID-19 vaccine to elderly people in care facilities and begins administering fourth doses for vulnerable people, citing the high-risk of infection.[370]
8 October – Mordechai Geldman (b. 1946), psychologist, poet, writer, artist, art critic and curator, and recipient of the Bialik Prize for lifetime achievements.[425]
^"Polish president approves WWII restitution law, defying Israel and US". The Times of Israel. 2021-08-14. Retrieved 2021-08-15. Poland's president approved a law on Saturday that will effectively prevent future restitution to the heirs of property seized by the Nazis during the Holocaust, defying strong opposition from Israel and the United States.
^"אבל בהפועל פ"ת: הלך לעולמו עמיחי שהם" [Mourning at Hapoel Petach Tikva: Amichai Shoham has passed away]. Maariv Sport 1 (in Hebrew). 2021-05-25. Retrieved 2021-06-21.
^"אבל בכדורסל הישראלי: יעקב אדלר נפטר" [Mourning in Israeli Basketball: Yaacov Adler has died]. ONE - מספר אחד בספורט (in Hebrew). 2021-12-27. Retrieved 2022-01-04.
Artikel ini sebatang kara, artinya tidak ada artikel lain yang memiliki pranala balik ke halaman ini.Bantulah menambah pranala ke artikel ini dari artikel yang berhubungan atau coba peralatan pencari pranala.Tag ini diberikan pada Januari 2023. Dasyerrus pilosus Klasifikasi ilmiah Kerajaan: Animalia Filum: Arthropoda Kelas: Insecta Ordo: Coleoptera Famili: Cerambycidae Genus: Dasyerrus Spesies: Dasyerrus pilosus Dasyerrus pilosus adalah spesies kumbang tanduk panjang yang tergolong famili Cer...
Shlomo GazitShlomo GazitNama asalשלמה גזיתLahirShlomo Weinstein1926 (1926)Istanbul, TurkiMeninggal8 Oktober 2020(2020-10-08) (umur 93–94)Dikenal atas Mayor Jenderal dalam Pasukan Pertahanan Israel; mengepalai Direktorat Intelijensi Militer Israel Presiden Universitas Ben-Gurion Kepala Agensi Yahudi KerabatMordechai Gazit (saudara) Shlomo Gazit (Ibrani: שלמה גזית; 1926 – 8 Oktober 2020) adalah seorang perwira militer dan akademisi asal Israel. Sebagai May...
Tennis tournament1994 NCAA Division I Women's Tennis ChampionshipsDateMay 1994Edition13thLocationAthens, GeorgiaVenueDan Magill Tennis ComplexUniversity of GeorgiaChampionsWomen's singlesAngela Lettiere(Georgia)Women's doublesRebecca Jensen / Nora Koves(Kansas) ← 1993 · NCAA Division I Women's Tennis Championships · 1995 → The 1994 NCAA Division I Women's Tennis Championships were the 13th annual championships to determine the national champions of NCAA Divis...
Moss Beach Plaats in de Verenigde Staten Vlag van Verenigde Staten Locatie van Moss Beach in Californië Locatie van Californië in de VS Situering County San Mateo County Type plaats Census-designated place Staat Californië Coördinaten 37° 32′ NB, 122° 31′ WL Algemeen Oppervlakte 4,6 km² - land 4,6 km² - water 0,0 km² Inwoners (2000) 1.953 Hoogte 20 m Overig ZIP-code(s) 94038 FIPS-code 49446 Portaal Verenigde Staten Moss Beach is een plaats (census-designated ...
Pour les articles homonymes, voir Aaron. AaRON AaRON en 2009.Informations générales Pays d'origine France Genre musical Rock alternatif, rock électronique[1], electropop[2] Années actives Depuis 2004 Labels Cinq7, Wagram Music Site officiel www.aaron-world.org Composition du groupe Membres Simon BuretOlivier Coursier modifier AaRON (Artificial Animals Riding On Neverland) est un groupe de rock alternatif français. Il est formé en 2004 par Simon Buret et Olivier Coursier. Le groupe est r...
Китайські шовкові Карликовий кохінхін чорний (півень)ПоходженняКраїна КНРХарактерні рисиМаса півень 1,5 кг курка — 1,1 кг. Китайські шовкові — декоративна порода курей китай, родом з Китаю. Ця порода вважається досить давньою. Ще у XIII столітті Марко Поло писав ...
2010 single by DJ Zinc and Ms. Dynamite Wile OutSingle by DJ Zinc featuring Ms. DynamiteReleased7 February 2010Recorded2009-10GenreHouse, breakbeatLength5:02LabelZinc MusicSongwriter(s)Zinc, Ms. DynamiteDJ Zinc singles chronology Drive By Car / Ins (2005) Wile Out (2010) Ms. Dynamite singles chronology Fall in Love Again(2006) Wile Out(2010) What You Talking About!?(2010) Wile Out is a single by DJ Zinc featuring vocals from Ms. Dynamite. It was released on 7 February 2010 as a digita...
Passport of the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan issued to Jordanian citizens Jordanian PassportTypePassportIssued by Jordan Civil Status and Passport Department (CSPD)PurposeIdentificationEligibilityJordanian citizenshipExpirationIn 5 YearsCostDepends but in some cases 20 25 50 100 250JOD The Jordanian passport (Arabic: جواز السفر الأردني) is issued by the Civil Status and Passport Department (CSPD) to citizens of Jordan for international travel. Passport types Jordan issues ...
У Вікіпедії є статті про інші значення цього терміна: Suomi. Suomi Тип пістолет-кулеметПоходження ФінляндіяІсторія використанняНа озброєнні 1931–1980Історія виробництваРозробник Аймо ЛахтіРозроблено кінець 1920-хВиробник Tikkakoski AbВиготовленакількість ~80,000ХарактеристикиВа
Nota: Para outros significados, veja Ester (desambiguação). Esta página cita fontes, mas que não cobrem todo o conteúdo. Ajude a inserir referências. Conteúdo não verificável pode ser removido.—Encontre fontes: ABW • CAPES • Google (N • L • A) (Dezembro de 2019) Ester Rainha dos Persas e Medos EsterQueen Esther, por Edwin Long de 1878. Nome completo Hadassa Bat Avihail Cônjuge Assuero Pai Abiail Ocupação rainh...
Harald zur Hausen (2010) Harald zur Hausen (* 11. März 1936 in Gelsenkirchen; † 29. Mai 2023 in Heidelberg)[1] war ein deutscher Mediziner. 2008 wurde ihm der Nobelpreis für Physiologie oder Medizin für die Entdeckung zuerkannt, dass humane Papillomviren (HPV) Gebärmutterhalskrebs verursachen können.[2] Inhaltsverzeichnis 1 Leben 2 Forschungsgebiete 3 Ehrungen und Auszeichnungen 4 Schriften (Auswahl) 5 Literatur über Harald zur Hausen 6 Weblinks 7 Einzelnachweise Leben...
Армія інків — багатонаціональне військо імперії Тауантінсую, найпотужніша та найбільша військова потуга Південної Америки. Сприяла розширенню кордонів держави, забезпечувала внутрішню безпеки імперії проти змов та заколотів, нападів з боку зовнішніх ворогів. Почи...
مسييه 2 بيانات المراقبة الكوكبة الدلو[1] البعد () القدر الظاهري (V) 6.25 [2][3]، و4.70 [4]، و7.297 [5]، و6.836 [5]، و6.567 [5]، و6.384 [5] سرعة شعاعية -5.3 كيلومتر في الثانية[2]، و-3.0 كيلومتر في الثانية[6]، و-6.7 كيلومتر في الثانية[...
Sweet equity redirects here. Not to be confused with sweat equity, a party's contribution to a project in the form of labor rather than financial equity. Envy ratio, in finance, is the ratio of the price paid by investors to that paid by the management team for their respective shares of the equity. It is used to consider an opportunity for a management buyout. Managers are often allowed to invest at a lower valuation to make their ownership possible and to create a personal financial incenti...
Canadian sport television channel Television channel Sportsnet WorldSportsnet World logoCountryCanadaBroadcast areaNationalHeadquartersToronto, OntarioProgrammingPicture format480i (SDTV)1080i (HDTV)OwnershipOwnerRogers Sports & Media(Rogers Sportsnet, Inc.)Sister channelsSportsnetSportsnet 360Sportsnet OneHistoryLaunchedAugust 10, 2007Former namesSetanta Sports (2007–2011)LinksWebsiteSportsnet World Sportsnet World is a Canadian English language discretionary digital cable and satellit...
This article does not cite any sources. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.Find sources: Big Brother Finnish season 6 – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (August 2010) (Learn how and when to remove this template message) Season of television series Big BrotherSeason 6Presented byElina ViitanenSusanna LaineNo. of days97No. of housemates27WinnerNiko Nou...
Ini adalah daftar katedral di Papua Nugini diurutkan berdasarkan denominasi. Katedral Santa Maria, Port Moresby Katolik Katedral Gereja Katolik di Papua Nugini berikut (semuanya adalah Ritus Latin) berlokasi di Papua Nugini:[1][2] Katedral Santo Ignasius di Aitape Katedral Hati Kudus Yesus di Alotau Katedral Bunda Maria dari Hati Kudus di Bereina Katedral Bunda Maria Dikandung Tanpa Noda di Hahela Katedral Santo Gerardus di Kiunga Kon-Katedral Santo Louis de Montfort di Daru K...
Indian television series VishAlso known asVish: A Poisonous StoryGenreSupernatural Revenge Drama Mystery ThrillerCreated byAlind Srivastava Nissar ParvejStarringDebina BonnerjeeSana MakbulVishal VashishthaOpening themeVishnuCountry of originIndiaOriginal languageHindiNo. of seasons1No. of episodes80ProductionProducersAlind Srivastava Nissar ParvejProduction locationMumbai Maharashtra IndiaCamera setupMulti-cameraRunning time22 minutesProduction companyPeninsula Productions LimitedOriginal rel...