As of Tuesday morning, 11,868 Israelis have tested positive for coronavirus, which has so far killed 118 people in the country. According to the country’s Health Ministry, 181 patients are currently listed in serious condition, of which 136 are on ventilators. The vast majority of cases—9,402—are defined as light or minor.

A total of 1,214 coronavirus carriers are being treated in hotels converted to quarantine facilities, while 7,145 are quarantined in their homes. already, 2,000 people have recovered from the virus to date, making the recovery-to-death ratio nearly 20:1, twice as high as it was on April 6, when 10 corona patients in Israel were recovering for every one patient who died.

The Health Ministry’s Administration for Strategic and Economic Planning on Tuesday published figures breaking down confirmed cases by community. As of Tuesday morning, Jerusalem, Israel’s largest city, had the highest number of cases at 2,258, followed by Bnei Brak with 2,053 and Tel Aviv-Jaffa with 468.

Both Jerusalem and Bnei Brak boast large ultra-Orthodox populations, as does Modi’in Illit, which had 239 confirmed cases as of Tuesday, and Petach Tikvah, with 229 cases. Rishon Letzion—Israel’s fourth-largest municipality—had 209 cases, Ashdod 195 and Haifa 139. Rehovot, a city of 110,000, had 104 cases. Lod and Ramle, home to mixed Jewish and Arab populations, reported 69 and 58 cases, respectively.

As part of the government’s continued efforts to check the spread of coronavirus, Israel’s Security Cabinet authorized overnight on Monday a nationwide curfew on Jewish communities, which will begin on 5 p.m. on Tuesday and last until 5 a.m. on Thursday.

The decision will curb the traditional Mimouna celebrations that mark the end of Passover in some communities, and the rush on bakeries, which generally open as soon as the holiday ends.

Meanwhile, Israel Defense Forces Home Front Command Maj. Gen. Tamir Yadai said on Monday that the nation needed to be prepared for the coronavirus “event” to last a year, but that steps must be taken to restore the economy and to discuss “coping strategies,” rather than an “exit strategy.”

Speaking to military correspondents, Yadai said he believed that “we must return to normal, gradually, especially to work.”

He warned that social and economic problems were developing along with the corona health crisis, and noted that the Home Front Command was handling the issue of Israelis returning from abroad, who needed to be quarantined.

“Four to six new hotels will be opened to accommodate everyone. There are 2,000 to 2,500 people who will need to spend time [in quarantine] in a hotel,” he said.

Addressing the matter of the ultra-Orthodox sector, where the corona infection rate is high, Yadai told reporters that the accommodations set up for the sector could supply everything that they need, including the most stringent kashrut supervision.

This article first appeared in Israel Hayom.

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