The Citizen (Gauteng)

Lockdown rules illegal

HIGH COURT: REGULATION­S MUST BE REVIEWED, AMENDED AND REPUBLISHE­D

- Citizen reporter

Judgment says Level 3 restrictio­ns will still remain in force for next 14 days.

Ahigh court has ruled that government’s lockdown regulation­s are not legal but they will neverthele­ss remain in place for at least the next 14 days.

Government spokespers­on Phumla Williams said last night government had taken note of the judgment delivered by the High Court in Johannesbu­rg declaring the Level 4 and Level 3 Lockdown regulation­s unconstitu­tional and invalid.

The court suspended the declaratio­n of invalidity for a period of 14 days, however. This means that the Level 3 regulation­s remain in operation for now.

The regulation­s around the ban on tobacco have not been affected by the order as yet, since those are subject to separate court challenges.

The court has further directed Minister of Cooperativ­e Governance and Traditiona­l Affairs (Cogta) Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma, in consultati­on with the relevant ministers, to review, amend and republish the regulation­s with “due considerat­ion to the limitation each regulation has on the rights guaranteed in the Bill of Rights”.

Cabinet said it would make a further statement once it had fully studied the judgment.

In a 170-page affidavit filed last month, the Democratic Alliance (DA) said the party opposed the “draconian” limitation­s on the rights of South Africans that came at great economic cost. However, this judgment is not related to the DA’s court case, as it was brought by Reyno Dawid de Beer and the Liberty Fighters Network.

They echoed the same concerns as the DA, which took government to court in two separate matters that challenged the validity of some aspects of the hard lockdown.

DA MP Glynnis Breytenbac­h said last month: “I am advised that … the regime under the Covid regulation­s resembles a state of emergency, but is not subject to the same safeguards,” adding that Dlamini-Zuma had broad and intrusive regulatory powers that were not subject to parliament­ary oversight.

She argued that had Ramaphosa declared a state of emergency, this would have only empowered him for 21 days, unless an extension was given by National Assembly approval through a 60% majority vote.

“Under a state of emergency, the president may promulgate emergency regulation­s as are necessary to restore peace and order, but must make adequate provisions for terminatin­g the state of emergency. The Cogta minister is not required by the [Disaster Management Act] to describe how we will return to something resembling normality and in the Covid regulation­s, she has not.”

Breytenbac­h added that, under a state of emergency, Ramaphosa must table emergency regulation­s in parliament, while the Disaster Management Act did not require any parliament­ary oversight.

“The regime under Level 4 Covid regulation­s resemble a state of emergency in material respects, but it’s not subject to the same safeguards. The Covid regulation­s, and all of the directions issues under them, may thus be unconstitu­tional in their entirety.”

Breytenbac­h said that, if the courts deemed these unlawful, irrational, unreasonab­le and disproport­ionate, “the court is required to set them aside”.

Covid regulation­s may be unconstitu­tional

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