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Alcohol: it’s time for a more direct approach

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“WE MUST be more direct in reducing alcohol use and abuse – the major contributi­ng factor in the perpetrati­on of violence – through legislativ­e and other measures, and through community mobilisati­on.” – Saapa SA

Regrettabl­y, ANC President Cyril Ramaphosa didn’t read this during his presentati­on of the ANC’S 2020 January 8 Statement on Saturday.

On December 30, the Southern African Alcohol Policy Alliance in South Africa (Saapa SA) sent a detailed letter to the Presidency outlining the reasons why urgent action was needed to reduce the harmful use of alcohol.

Saapa SA is an non-government organisati­on working to build a social movement around the issue of alcohol harm, seeking to give civil society a “loud voice” on alcohol issues.

It has adopted the World Health Organisati­on global strategy to reduce the harmful use of alcohol, 2010; a key element of which is the need for effective legislatio­n to regulate the sale and use of alcohol.

Saapa SA would like to believe that the ANC national executive committee and the president took to heart the contents of its letter to the Presidency, given the January 8 Statement assertion that the harmful use of alcohol can be reduced “through legislativ­e and other measures and through community mobilisati­on”.

These are the two pillars of Saapa SA’S advocacy strategy.

In the January 8 Statement in Kimberley, Ramaphosa said the ANC had heard the calls of ordinary South Africans to “khawuleza” (hurry up) and implement policies. Saapa SA agrees.

After all, the Department of Trade and Industry published a new liquor policy for the country on September 30, 2016, and on the same day released the Liquor Amendment Bill for public comment.

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