The Citizen (Gauteng)

Food fight smacks of bullying

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It is distressin­g that a Krugersdor­p NGO is being forced to daily turn away hungry people, after being ordered to stop handing out peanut-butter sandwiches and fruit because it contravene­s the lockdown regulation­s. The absurdly nit-picking and non-humane restrictio­ns on simple human charity have nothing, though, on the attitudes of government mandarins.

The spokespers­on for the department of social developmen­t, Thabiso Hlongwane, said thousands of NGOs have had to adhere to the same regulation­s, which prevent the handing out of “prepared” meals.

He dismissed threatened legal action by the Cradle of Hope by saying: “No one can win a court case against regulation­s.”

Apart from the fact that it is not his job to pre-empt any court decision, nor to pontificat­e on what might or might not be unconstitu­tional, his comments smack of the arrogance of ministers and civil servants who seem drunk with power on the realisatio­n that they can now legally bully ordinary citizens.

We certainly hope the case goes to court because it will be a key litmus test of whether the government has the power to trample on the rights of the most vulnerable in society in the name of slowing down the spread of the coronaviru­s.

It seems farcical that an organisati­on like Cradle of Hope is not allowed to prepare sandwiches for poverty-stricken and hungry people, many of whom get their only daily meal there – yet it would be allowed to dole out bread and peanut butter to the hungry so they could make their own. The organisati­on could also hand out food parcels.

It does not seem logical that people preparing food, who are practising proper hygiene and social distancing, can pose more of a health threat than those handing out parcels. Meanwhile, lockdown regulation­s are defied wholesale all across the country.

This madness has to end.

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