Mmegi

Necessary or erroneous advice?

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As soon as Parliament voted in favour of the State of Emergency, the first order of business, through the advice of the Presidenti­al Task Force, was to declare extreme social distancing colloquial­ly known as a lockdown for six weeks beginning in April 2020. This lockdown was intended to achieve the containmen­t of the virus by restrictin­g the movement of people across the country. All non-essential businesses were shut down. The sale of alcohol was banned and this would not be the last time that alcohol would pay the price in the fight against COVID-19. Movement was restricted save for essential services only and everyone else needed a permit in order to do anything as simple as going shopping.

By the time the lockdown was declared, government was far from appraising the public on the process of applying for permits. Panic and pandemoniu­m were let loose and people went on a frenzy to panic buy while some sought to gallop using the fasted route out of the city to their villages. The first week of lockdown was an absolute disaster that descended into more chaos and confusion. Permits were to be issued depending on the cause of movement from various government offices. However, from the District Commission­er’s office, Ministry of Trade to the Ministry of Agricultur­e, by the time the lockdown was declared, none had sufficient time to apply for permits and therefore people had to travel during the lockdown to pursue a paper-based permit long distances away.

The first day of the lockdown saw commuters stranded and set upon by police officers who demanded to see permits that by all counts could only have been acquired that same day. Transport operators were to operate at half their capacity or less. Bus operators, especially long-distance operators, were told to operate at 70% capacity, an idea that only resulted in the bus operators going on strike as their operationa­l costs were too heavy to sustain.

Perhaps the most shocking part was that by the time the lockdown was declared, the government had not committed resources towards an online-based platform for the applicatio­n of permits even though there are institutio­ns of government that are a burden to the taxpayer with annual budgets of millions including Botswana Innovation Hub (BIH) and Botswana Institute for Technology Research and Innovation (BITRI). All the years of investment in these institutio­ns proved to be futile at a time when the nation needed them the most and the idea only came later and after great inconvenie­nce and frustratio­n to the public.

As for the informal sector, it bore the biggest brunt as the livelihood of hundreds of thousands came to an abrupt halt without the possibilit­y of generating any meaningful income in the foreseeabl­e future. In addition, non-essential companies also had to contend with the burden of not generating revenue due to the extreme social distancing that was declared. Hotels including Avani and Grand Plan were the first to contend with employees who resorted to striking due to non-payment of the salaries even though by law a public strike was illegal.

A few other establishm­ents including the employees of a security company that was guarding at the University Botswana also resorted to strike due to non-payment of their monthly salaries. Just when the dust was about to settle, employees for local manufactur­ing behemoth company Kromberg & Schubert Botswana also entered the fray to strike for non-payment of salaries. These employees were later arrested for contraveni­ng the SOE laws.

Another group of local musicians took to the streets buckling under the pressure of the cost of living has given up on CosBots. The state responded by using the Botswana Defence Force to clamp them down and quell the potential rise of unrest that could have been caused by the musicians.

To relieve the burden of this worsening situation, the government proceeded to offer relief in the form of an industry-wide wage subsidy and food hampers. The wage subsidy was disbursed through the Botswana Unified Revenue Services while food hampers were disbursed through local government and the various district councils that fall under it. The wage subsidy lasted from April to June while the food hampers were only disbursed for April.

However, there were alleged reports of impropriet­y by companies applying for the wage subsidy, while some government officials and contractor­s were also accused of corruption in the food hampers programme.

To afford this large-scale undertakin­g, government put in P2 billion and solicited contributi­ons from the public. The use of these funds was premised on the promise that an audit report would later be availed to reflect how much was spent and on what.

That report is yet to be brought forward even though the State of Emergency expired at the end of September 2021.

As for the food hampers, there were reports that some if not most ended up being thrown away even though the expenditur­e reached hundreds of millions of pula.

While the objective of the lockdown was to contain the spread of the virus, the outcome is far removed from the objective and came at grave cost to the economy. It has been estimated that the first lockdown cost the economy of Botswana P10 billion. While this is a large sum of money, there are some that say it pales in comparison to the cost of living and that the economy can and will recover and that the preservati­on of life should always come first even before the economy.

It was not long until government realised that it could not sustain the burden of a lockdown and on the third week of May 2020, restrictio­ns were slowly lifted allowing trade to take place in phases.

Was the task force right in advising the President to declare a lockdown in the hindsight of the outcome of this heavy-handed course of action?

While the economy was reeling from being pummelled by the six weeks of lockdown, the Task Force upon realising that lockdown was no longer an instrument to employ, advised the use of the next best instrument being a curfew.

 ?? PIC: THALEFANG CHARLES ?? Tough times: The April/May lockdown cost the economy heavily
PIC: THALEFANG CHARLES Tough times: The April/May lockdown cost the economy heavily

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