Cape Times

New liquor laws will ruin us – traders

- Manyane Manyane

THE SA Liquor Traders Associatio­n (Salta) said yesterday that the government’s new liquor amendment and tobacco laws would damage small and informal businesses.

Salta said it submitted a proposal to oppose the regulation­s to the Department of Trade and Industry (dti).

Salta’s president, Mish Hlophe, said the amendments would push the country into a crisis. “While every South African is feeling pressure of a challengin­g political and economic climate, none are feeling the pressure more than the 1 million small business owners that are trying to make an honest living in our townships.”

The dti announced the Liquor Amendment Bill in September, which said, among other things, manufactur­ers and suppliers would be held liable for offences committed in unlicensed pubs and shebeens. The department said the bill would be open for public opinion until next month.

Hlophe said the government should create an environmen­t that supported business growth if it wanted to create 1.3 million jobs and develop 450 thousand small businesses in the next three years.

“We assume that these laws were made in Europe… We will like to call all people, including local government­s to raise their voice against these laws. We cannot support laws that will harm our people’s ability to support their families,” Hlophe said.

The government said in May that it would introduce plain packaging on tobacco products to reduce demand. Linda Madida, the president of the Gauteng Liquor Forum, said the amendments would have a negative impact on informal businesses.

Madida said removing branding from packs would help crime syndicates to sell their fake tobacco. “This will lead to more corruption, more criminals and cheap cigarettes being sold to young children.”

Fanny Mokoena, the president of National Tourism Hospitalit­y Associatio­n, said: “Extreme laws are a short cut that should be avoided.”

 ?? PHOTO: NICHOLAS RAMA ?? SA Liquor Traders Associatio­n president Mish Hlophe (right), Gauteng Liquor Forum’s Linda Madida (second right) and National Tourism Hospitalit­y Associatio­n’s Fanny Mokoena (left) at Joe’s Butchery in Alexandra.
PHOTO: NICHOLAS RAMA SA Liquor Traders Associatio­n president Mish Hlophe (right), Gauteng Liquor Forum’s Linda Madida (second right) and National Tourism Hospitalit­y Associatio­n’s Fanny Mokoena (left) at Joe’s Butchery in Alexandra.

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