Sunday Times

Married and jailed on the same day

- By NIVASHNI NAIR

● Joggers, people braaiing and even newlyweds are among those being reported on for breaking the lockdown laws.

A wedding in Nkandla in northern KwaZulu-Natal landed school principal Jabulani Zulu, 48, and his fiancée Nomthandaz­o Mkhize, 38, in trouble.

The two were married and jailed on the same day, then released on R1,000 bail each. Neither could be reached for comment.

Nkandla mayor Thami Ntuli said he was told a member of the public alerted police.

Another told the Sunday Times he had reported his neighbours for jogging in groups, cycling and even holding braais on their sidewalks. He said reporting them to the police was the right thing to do.

He had submitted photograph­s of his neighbours in the Midstream Estate in Midrand, near Johannesbu­rg, to the homeowners’ associatio­n, local police and the local ward councillor.

“We cannot have social ill discipline when people’s lives are at stake,” said the resident, who did not wish to be named. “South Africans appear to be taking the pandemic way too lightly without realising that we could have significan­t consequenc­es to both life and our economy.

“Both my wife and I have compromise­d immune systems, me more than her. My physician has warned that the probabilit­y of me dying, should I become infected, is quite high, so I have been in lockdown for 11 days already and my wife for eight days.”

He said that as a businessma­n he would also be ruined financiall­y if the lockdown was extended because the virus had not been contained as a result of people having no respect for the law.

People living in the Midstream Estate have been informed about restrictio­ns in the area, according to the estate forum’s chair, Jan Zeederberg. He said he’d cleared up confusion about whether open areas were an extension of residences. About 6,000 families live in the area of about 1,200ha.

A Durban woman who was reported said she had been surprised that her movements were being watched. She had posted a video on Facebook of her feeding 10 homeless people in Chatsworth, south of Durban.

“A day later, I received a call from a police officer informing me that I had violated the restrictio­ns. I apologised and I accept that I was wrong, but I couldn’t just let those people go hungry,” she said.

“The police told me that they will accompany me when I feed the poor families in the community daily and I even had charity organisati­ons, with permits, invite me to work with them.”

 ?? Picture: Alon Skuy ?? A noncomplia­nt resident walks the dogs.
Picture: Alon Skuy A noncomplia­nt resident walks the dogs.

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