After Tel Aviv Mayor and Chairman of the "Israelis Party" Huldai announced that he would open cultural institutions for the vaccinated in February, Deputy Spokesman Raz Nizri issued a clarification
Ron Huldai and Raz Nazri
Photography:
Gideon Markovich, Dudi Vaknin
The Deputy Attorney General, Adv. Raz Nazri, came out tonight (Sunday) against the Mayor of Tel Aviv and the Chairman of the Israelis, Ron Huldai, who intends to open the cultural institutions for the vaccinated without government approval as early as next month.
In a letter sent to the Minister of Culture and Sports, Hili Troper, the Deputy Ombudsman clarifies that "the legal way to open cultural institutions to the public is through the abolition of the ban or non-extension by the government, Judge for itself and independently formulate rules for returning the cultural industry to activity.
Nizri noted that "these days the Ministry of Health is working in coordination with the Ministry of Culture and with the legal advice to the government to formulate an outline of" green mark "designed, among other things, to return cultural institutions to activity, when the health situation allows.
"There is a large crowd of vaccinated people with green passports - there is no reason why the person who has been vaccinated will not be able to get to the Cameri," Huldai said this morning in an interview with the Kalman-Lieberman program here.
"It is impossible to wait for Netanyahu to open it the day before the election."
In a post he posted on his social media pages, Huldai wrote that anyone with two doses of vaccines could enter the city's cultural institutions: "We will not wait for Bibi-Ganz's government, which knows how to manage nothing. At press conferences. "
At the beginning of February, I will open all the cultural institutions in Tel Aviv-Jaffa to anyone who has received two vaccines.
We will not wait for the Bibi-Ganz government, which does not know how to manage anything. For
us, it is deeds and not talk.
- Ron Huldai (@Ron_Huldai) January 17, 2021
Health Minister Yuli Edelstein attacked Huldai's decision: "He is doing politics at the expense of public health. The public is important to him. "
In response to Huldai's announcement, Minister of Culture and Sports Hili Trooper responded: "As we announced last week, the world of culture is about to open first with the 'Culture in Responsibility' outline and the green passport that includes vaccinated, recovering and tested "But it would be better not for election purposes but out of a responsible and true conception. When it comes to statehood and health, I suggest everyone put populism aside."