Relief for Covid-19’s victims who are able to self-isolate
The government may not force patients testing positive for Covid-19 into compulsory state quarantine if they are able to self-isolate, the high court in Pretoria ruled on Wednesday.
AfriForum is claiming the court’s ruling as a victory after challenging regulations signed by the co-operative governance and traditional affairs ministry under the Disaster Management Act on April 29.
“These regulations, which AfriForum regards as ... irrational, were aimed at putting everyone who tests positive for Covid-19 under compulsory state quarantine,” the lobby group said in a statement.
The regulations suggested that everyone who tested positive for Covid-19 could be placed in a government isolation facility.
The department did not oppose the application.
“These regulations would have given the state the power to force people into quarantine without their permission — even in circumstances where the person may be able to effectively self-isolate.
“It would consequently have given law enforcers and the state too much power under the guise of combating the spread of the virus,” said AfriForum.
“The importance of civil rights organisations and institutions that oppose autocratic and irrational decisions by government has become increasingly clear during this lockdown.
“When the government abuses its power and tries to bully the public by violating people’s rights, AfriForum will stand up against it to the benefit of everyone in the country,” said Monique Taute, head of campaigns at AfriForum.
To self-isolate successfully patients must have access to separate rooms and the ability to contact, or get to, health facilities if their conditions worsened, according to the judgment.
The high court ruling comes after two Limpopo doctors were forced into quarantine by the provincial health department in April.
Dr Claire Olivier and Dr Taryn Williams, who work at Mmametlhake Hospital in Mpumalanga, were already selfisolating at home when they were forced into quarantine.
The two tested positive on March 29.
Judge Norman Davis, in a separate ruling handed down on Tuesday, issued a scathing assessment of the government’s lockdown laws, saying that they were not well thought out and contravened the bill of rights.