The Citizen (KZN)

Police boss’ smoking ban ‘out of order’

- Citizen reporter

A South African Police Service spokespers­on has rubbished reported comments by a KwaZulu-Natal police captain to the effect that smoking was banned during the lockdown.

The Zululand Observer last Friday quoted the spokespers­on for the King Cetshwayo police cluster, Captain Mbongeni Mdlalose, as saying: “People are not supposed to smoke… If you are found smoking, it is still a crime … government clearly stated that smoking is not allowed.”

This was in an article about the rise of the illicit tobacco trade in the face of the current sales ban.

Brigadier Vishnu Naidoo yesterday said Mdlalose was “out of order”.

“Smoking is not prohibited. It’s only the buying and selling of cigarettes that’s prohibited,” Naidoo said.

Stores were forced to clear their shelves of cigarettes and tobacco products in March, when the national lockdown took effect and the sale of non-essential items was banned.

Many had hoped when the lockdown moved from Level 5 to Level 4 this month, they would be able to buy cigarettes once more. But Cooperativ­e Governance

and Traditiona­l Affairs Minister Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma at the last minute announced this would not be the case and that cigarette and tobacco product sales would remain banned. This prompted British American Tobacco South Africa (Batsa) – the largest cigarette manufactur­er and distributo­r in the country – to threaten court action.

Batsa ultimately withdrew that action, saying it had “decided to pursue further discussion­s with government on the formulatio­n and applicatio­n of the regulation­s under the

Covid-19 lockdown”.

In the meantime, though, the Fair Trade Independen­t Tobacco Associatio­n (Fita) is challengin­g the ban in the High Court in Pretoria.

Fita secured a partial victory last week, when government agreed to allow the manufactur­e and export of tobacco products.

The associatio­n is, however, still pursuing the resumption of general sales through the courts.

It also wants access to the minutes of the National Command Council meetings at which decisions were taken around the lockdown regulation­s and, specifical­ly, the sale of cigarettes and tobacco products.

Only the buying and selling of cigarettes prohibited

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa