Business Day

SA eases lockdown to open up the economy

• President announces move to level 3 from June 1

- Genevieve Quintal Political Editor

SA will further roll back restrictio­ns to contain the Covid-19 pandemic from June 1 in a piecemeal exit from the lockdown that will allow the reopening of vast swathes of the economy.

President Cyril Ramaphosa on Sunday announced the easing of the lockdown from June 1 to level 3, allowing the majority of industries including finance and manufactur­ing, to return to work, and lifting the nationwide curfew and the restrictio­ns on exercise.

The ban on the sale of alcohol would also be lifted but not on the sale of tobacco products, which will remain prohibited due to the health risks associated with smoking, Ramaphosa said.

“The burden of the lockdown has been most severe for those least able to bear it. Now it is time for most of us to return to work and to resume parts of our lives that have been on hold since the lockdown began,” he said.

“However, I want to emphasise that the easing of some restrictio­ns does not mean that the threat posed by the coronaviru­s has passed or that our fight against the disease is over.”

SA has been in a Covid-19 nationwide lockdown for eight weeks, causing economists to forecast the worst economic contractio­n in at least a century.

The lockdown was put in place to curb the spread of the virus but has had a devastatin­g effect on the country’s economy.

Ramaphosa said though the entire country would be moving to a lower lockdown level, there were still a number of hotspots identified where the virus was concentrat­ed and infections continued to rise.

Hotspots were areas where there were more than five people per every 100,000 people or where new infections increased at a fast pace. The president said there would be a differenti­ated approach to deal with those areas. Five of the countries metros have been identified as hotspots – Tshwane, Johannes

burg, Ekurhuleni, Ethekwini, Nelson Mandela Bay, Buffalo City and Cape Town.

Ramaphosa said the government was particular­ly concerned about the situation in Cape Town, which had more than half of the total infections in the country, and would be attending to this with urgency.

Intensive interventi­ons would be implemente­d in hotspot areas aimed at decreasing the number of new infections.

Ramaphosa said each hotspot will be assigned a full-time team of experience­d personnel such as epidemiolo­gists, family practition­ers, nurses, community health workers, public health experts and emergency medical services, to be supported by Cuban experts, who arrived in the country a few weeks ago.

Surveillan­ce, infection control and management would be enhanced in these areas.

The president said if necessary, any part of the country could be returned to level 4 or level 5 of the lockdown if the spread of the infection was not contained despite the interventi­ons and there was a risk that health facilities would be overwhelme­d.

In time, it would also be possible to place other areas where the infections are low on level 2 or level 1, he said.

Despite the easing of the lockdown and opening of the economy, the government is asking those who do not need to go to work or an educationa­l institutio­n to continue staying at home.

Ramaphosa said all manufactur­ing, mining, constructi­on, financial services, profession­al and business services, informatio­n technology, communicat­ions, government services and media services, will fully open from June 1.

Wholesale and retail will be fully opened, including stores, spaza shops and informal traders. People will be able to leave their homes to go shopping and obtain services but all gatherings remain prohibited, except for funerals with no more than 50 people or meetings for work purposes, he said.

Alcohol will only be sold for at-home consumptio­n, as restaurant­s, bars and taverns remain closed, and the sale will be under strict conditions, on specified days and for limited hours.

Ramaphosa said an announceme­nt on this would be made once discussion­s with the sector were completed.

The president said accommodat­ion and domestic air travel — except for business travel, which would be phased in on dates to be announced — will remain prohibited, as well as conference­s, events, entertainm­ent and sporting activities; and personal-care services, including hairdressi­ng and beauty services.

THE BAN ON THE SALE OF ALCOHOL WILL ALSO BE LIFTED BUT NOT ON THE SALE OF TOBACCO PRODUCTS, WHICH REMAINS PROHIBITED

RAMAPHOSA SAYS THE GOVERNMENT WAS PARTICULAR­LY CONCERNED ABOUT THE SITUATION IN CAPE TOWN

 ?? /Anthony Kwan/Getty Images ?? Hong Kong protests: Pro-democracy supporters make gestures and hold placards as they take part in an anti-government rally on Sunday in Hong Kong. Chinese Premier Li Keqiang said on Friday that Beijing would establish a sound legal system and enforcemen­t mechanism for safeguardi­ng national security in Hong Kong.
/Anthony Kwan/Getty Images Hong Kong protests: Pro-democracy supporters make gestures and hold placards as they take part in an anti-government rally on Sunday in Hong Kong. Chinese Premier Li Keqiang said on Friday that Beijing would establish a sound legal system and enforcemen­t mechanism for safeguardi­ng national security in Hong Kong.
 ?? /Werner Hills ?? Opening up: President Cyril Ramaphosa on Sunday announced the easing of the lockdown from June 1 to level 3.
/Werner Hills Opening up: President Cyril Ramaphosa on Sunday announced the easing of the lockdown from June 1 to level 3.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa