
The storm, make up of accumulated dust carried from the far reaches of the Sahara Desert in North Africa, also engulfed Cairo for a second day.
Israel's Environmental Protection Ministry said air pollution levels were the country's worst in five years and the storm would last into tonight.
Israeli airports spokeswoman Liza Dvir said flights to and from the Red Sea resort city of Eilat were temporarily grounded due to the weather, though planes still flew through the country's main international hub, Ben Gurion Airport outside of Tel Aviv.

In Beirut, Lebanon's capital city, strong waves broke fences, tiles and tore away part of its corniche overlooking the Mediterranean. The storm also brought heavy winds, rain and snow to the mountains.
Lebanese weather forecasters said the wind reached speeds of 60mph.
The strong sandstorm first reached Egypt yesterday, temporarily closing Cairo International Airport to incoming flights and the weather front caused strong waves to crash into the coast, resulting in the closure of two seaports.

Mohieddin said during the closure of Cairo's airspace, four flights were diverted to another airport, while a fifth returned to Amman, Jordan.
The country's second-busiest airport outside of the city of Alexandria was closed to arrivals and departures, and flights were diverted to other airports unaffected by the storm, he added.
The state news agency said Alexandria and nearby Dekheila ports were also closed because of the weather.
Waves crashed into the shore of the Sinai Peninsula near the resort town of Dahab, forcing lifeguards into the Red Sea to rescue swimmers and divers.
A Japanese diver, who was caught in high waves, was pictured being pulled to safety by a friend in the town.
The sandstorm hit Egypt after unusually warm and sunny weather for a February day, and the sky over downtown Cairo turned yellow and blotted out the sun, limiting visibility.



about what is going on in the bigger picture. SoCal is hitting some record temps with big wind advisories at about the same latitude. It's expected to reach a record high of 90F in the inland areas with hot winds. But it's weirdly muggy too. But the other half of the country is going into the deep freeze again.
Does that kind of sandstorm blowing across the Med happen now and then or is it out of the ordinary?