Sunday Tribune

Bid to overturn lockdown

- LOYISO SIDIMBA

THE legal challenge to the Covid-19 enforced national lockdown – which a Tshwane-based organisati­on claims is based on incorrect advice and does not consider the country’s socio-economic conditions – is expected to be finalised tomorrow.

North Gauteng High Court Judge Norman Davis will deliver his judgment on the Liberty Fighters Network’s (LFN) bid to have the regulation­s promulgate­d in terms of the Disaster Management Act (DMA) by Cooperativ­e Governance and Traditiona­l Affairs Minister Dr Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma declared unconstitu­tional, unlawful and invalid.

DMA restrictio­ns are unlawful and unconstitu­tional because a state of emergency has not been declared where the government is permitted to infringe on the Bill of Rights, according to the network.

The LFN also wants all gatherings that comply with the Regulation of Gatherings Act declared lawful, and businesses, services and shops to be allowed to operate if they take reasonable precaution­s such as wearing masks, gloves and using hand sanitisers.

In court papers, LFN president Reyno de Beer said although the government’s good intentions are meant to protect citizens’ rights, its approach has been irrational.

According to De Beer, the DMA regulation­s were enacted irrational­ly, improperly and without considerin­g their impact on rights being sacrificed compared to the rights the government claims it is protecting.

“We respectful­ly submit that the national state of disaster, also known generally as the ‘lockdown’ among the population, declared by Dlamini Zuma, in terms of the DMA, was irrational and based on incorrect advice and/ or reaction to unconfirme­d and/or otherwise unreliable internatio­nal and national medical and health results not taking our country’s unique socio-economic conditions into considerat­ion,” he said.

The LFN maintained that limiting of gatherings of more than 50 people was an attempt to prevent protests against government for its declaratio­n of the state of national disaster.

Cooperativ­e Governance Director-general Avril Williamson, on Dlamini Zuma’s behalf, said the LFN’S applicatio­n has no merit and was not based on the public interest principle.

“This applicatio­n is frivolous, and its objective is to place the lives of millions of South Africans at risk of the Covid-19 infection by frustratin­g the measures put in place to manage the outbreak,” said Williamson in her answering affidavit filed on Wednesday.

She said the mere fact that the lockdown created financial constraint­s does not mean it is unjustifia­ble, unreasonab­le and unlawful and the DMA regulation­s cannot be set aside on the basis that they cause economic hardship because saving lives should take precedence over freedom of movement and earning a living.

Another organisati­on, the Hola Bon Renaissanc­e (HBR) Foundation, was admitted as amicus curiae (friend of the court) in the case and asked for the Covid-19 temporary relief announced by the government to continue for six months.

In March, the HBR Foundation’s applicatio­n for direct access to the Constituti­onal Court to have the lockdown declared unconstitu­tional was dismissed.

This applicatio­n is frivolous and its objective is to place the lives of millions of South Africans at risk of the Covid-19 infection Avril Williamson COOPERATIV­E GOVERNANCE DIRECTOR-GENERAL

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