The pandemic: Israeli minister resigns over plans for second lockdown
CGTN
Housing Minister Yaakov Litzman said the restrictions would prevent Jewish people from celebrating religious festivals later this month. /Getty Images

Housing Minister Yaakov Litzman said the restrictions would prevent Jewish people from celebrating religious festivals later this month. /Getty Images

A cabinet minister in Israel has handed in his resignation, protesting against plans to impose a second national lockdown.

Housing Minister Yaakov Litzman lamented that the restrictions would prevent Jewish people from celebrating religious festivals later this month.

The lockdown is due to come into force on Friday, the Jewish new year, and affect Yom Kippur, the holiest day of the Jewish calendar, on 27 September.

Mr Litzman also threatened to pull his party out of the governing coalition.

The measures will be the most extensive imposed in Israel since the country's first lockdown, which ran from late March until early May.

Mr Litzman, who leads an ultra-Orthodox Jewish party, said in his resignation letter: "This wrongs and scorns hundreds of thousands of citizens."

"Where were you until now? Why have the Jewish holidays become a convenient address for tackling the coronavirus?"

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has faced criticism for his handling of the outbreak. Critics say his failure to tackle the virus effectively has led to another national lockdown.

Israel, which has a population of about nine million, has reported more than 3,000 new cases a day in recent weeks.

Interior Minister Aryeh Deri - who leads another ultra-Orthodox party - said in a video posted on Twitter that he supported the planned restrictions, and that not abiding by them would be tantamount to murder.

Addressing the cabinet as it convened to vote on the lockdown on Sunday, Mr Netanyahu said he regretted Mr Litzman's resignation.

He added: "We have to move on, to make the decisions necessary for Israel in the coronavirus era, and that is what we will do in this session."

(With input from agencies)