The Independent on Saturday

Lockdown is legal, says High Court

- ZELDA VENTER zelda.venter@inl.co.za

LOCKDOWN regulation­s are here to stay for now, including that it is compulsory for everyone to wear a mask when in a public space.

Yesterday the Gauteng High Court, Pretoria, ruled against Reyno de Beer and his group Liberty Fighters Network’s applicatio­n to have the extension of the National State of Disaster and its regulation­s declared invalid.

In handing down his judgment, Judge Norman Davis also did not entertain De Beer’s applicatio­n for the court to hold Cooperativ­e Governance and Traditiona­l Affairs Minister Dr Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma in contempt of court by allegedly not adhering to some of the orders made by him in June last year.

Davis last year ruled in favour of De Beer and his network when he declared several of the level 5 and 4 regulation­s at the time as being irrational.

Government is set on appealing aspects of that judgment before the Supreme Court of Appeal later this year.

Davis said a lot had changed between then and now.

“The world and its response to the Covid-19 pandemic has mutated from time to time. The factual, regulatory and legal landscapes have also undergone unpreceden­ted changes,” he said.

The judge added that at the time of the launch of the first applicatio­n in May, South Africa had 12 704 coronaviru­s cases and 219 reported deaths.

At the time of the launch of the current applicatio­n in January, the number of reported cases in South Africa has risen to 1 127 579 cases and 30 976 deaths have been reported. This, while the second wave was still on its way.

“The deaths resulting from the pandemic, irrespecti­ve of any view any of the parties may hold, are tragic and evoke a deep sense of compassion.”

In responding to De Beer’s arguments that the court should overturn the compulsory wearing of masks, the judge said he had regard to all the expert evidence submitted relating to the wearing of masks and how it should be done in a bid to minimise infections. “I find no basis to declare the compulsory wearing of masks unconstitu­tional or invalid,” he said.

Each party was ordered to pay its own costs.

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