The Monitor (Botswana)

A REFLECTION ON THE NATION IN A STATE OF EMERGENCY – WHAT IS THE STATE OF EMERGENCY?

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n 31st March 2020, President, Mokgweetsi Masisi by way of decree, proclaimed and declared a state of public emergency over Botswana.

This declaratio­n was decreed in exercise of the powers vested in the president by section 17(1) of the Constituti­on of Botswana. The S.O.E. followed the recognitio­n and declaratio­n of the COVID-19 outbreak as a global pandemic, on 11 March 2020 by the World Health Organisati­on (WHO).

Upon determinin­g that the country would enter a period of S.O.E, the president indicated that the S.O.E stemmed from the need to take measures to address the risks posed by the pandemic.

The S.O.E, which at the time was scheduled to commence on 2nd April 2020, was to be for a short period of time. For reasons known by the country leadership, the S.O.E subsisted, and will only end on the back of September, perhaps as a 55th independen­ce gift to the country.

With the impending end of the State of Emergency, it is imperative to reflect and determine the effectiven­ess of the S.O.E, under the circumstan­ces. The main limitation of the analysis offered here, is that since the first case of COVID-19 was discovered in Botswana, the pandemic has been treated as urgent, and as an emergency for 17 months.

For this reason, and others unknown to the writer hereof, there has been no strategic plan developed to engage with the pandemic, to combat it, and to ensure readiness.

The plans which have been shared publicly, were shared through various addresses by the president, and other country leaders at different points of the pandemic. In some instances, the leaders declared that the country is in a period of extreme social distancing, with each pe- riod of extreme social distancing, being characteri­zed by various factors. In other periods, interzonal movement was largely prohibited, in efforts to contain the spread of the virus. Sometimes, alcohol was banned, and gatherings limited to smaller numbers, and other times contact tracing measures were introduced in different places where people gather.

Of course, because our leadership, like the rest of the world, were (and still are), dealing with a monster who does not disclose the next move, it would understand­ably have been challengin­g to come up with a concise plan of action. So we bear this in mind, in reflecting.

To begin with, it is important to define what a S.O.E. is. In addition to the general importance of definition, in that they help us think and communicat­e more clearly, and help us to better understand any subject matter, in this case, it will be essential in determinin­g whether the condition Botswana has been in, warranted the S.O.E and all its extensions, since its first introducti­on. It will also be critical in contextual­izing the actions taken by the leadership, and in interrogat­ing their necessity at the time. A S.O.E is a declaratio­n made in response to an extraordin­ary situation which poses an extraordin­ary threat to a country. The declaratio­n would suspend certain normal functions.

This includes the functions of government, as well as the limitation of citizen’s behaviors under normal circumstan­ces. S.O.E may also authorize government agencies to implement emergency preparedne­ss plans and limit or suspend the civil liberties and human rights of those in the country.

So in essence, a S.O.E is the introducti­on of emergency laws and restrictio­n in a period when the country is experienci­ng extraordin­ary circumstan­ces. The important principles and practices a government observing a S.O.E would have to be cognizant of in a period of S.O.E are provided for in various internatio­nal treaties to which Botswana is party. Amongst these are the Internatio­nal Covenant on Civil and Political Right (ICCPR).

The S.O.E should be made by way of declaratio­n announced publicly, for all citizens to be informed and made aware of the state. There should be communicat­ion of this to other states as well as treaty bodies to which the country is party.

The measures taken by the state, should be proportion­al in response to the crises being addressed. Human rights and fundamenta­l freedoms should be respected throughout the S.O.E, and there must be temporalit­y to this declaratio­n which should observe the intangibil­ity of fundamenta­l rights. Certain human rights cannot, even in the S.O.E be limited.

These include the right ti life, prohibitio­n of torture, freedom from slavery, freedom from post facto legislatio­n and other judicial guarantees, the right to recognitio­n before the law, and finally, freedom of thought, conscience and religion. The UN Human Rights Committee has further recognized that in addition to these nonderogab­le rights, several other humanitari­an provisions must remain inviolable.

There should be humane treatment of all persons deprived of their liberty, there should be protection of the rights of persons belonging to minorities, propaganda advocating war or national, racial or religious hatred are prohibited along with hostage-taking abd unacknowle­dged incarcerat­ion, and finally, there are procedural guarantees abd safeguards designed to ensure the integrity of the judicial system. In this series, reflecting on the S.O.E declared over Botswana, in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, we will engage on the effectiven­ess of the S.O.E.

A pandemic is indeed an extraordin­ary and unexpected event, which nobody could have anticipate­d, and nobody did. So whether by definition, the pandemic is a crisis demanding emergency and urgent response, is unquestion­able.

What we will engage with, is whether, under the circumstan­ces, Botswana upheld her internatio­nal obligation­s, and whether in responding to the crisis, the S.O.E successful­ly did what it was intended to do.

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