The Citizen (Gauteng)

Too late, but Cyril has no option

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In the space of a few sentences from President Cyril Ramaphosa on Sunday night, thousands of South Africans suddenly found themselves without jobs. The hospitalit­y sector was hardest hit – by bans on the sale of alcohol and restrictio­ns on seated dining in restaurant­s – and the booze and related industries, such as farming and transport, were just as pole-axed by Ramaphosa’s lockdown announceme­nt.

Political parties – as well as hordes of ordinary people – raged that this lockdown was too late, too harsh and too ineffectiv­e.

There is merit in those criticisms. The authoritie­s have known for some time that a third wave of Covid-19 was on the way … and to claim, as Ramaphosa did, that government only became aware of the highly infectious delta variant days ago, is misleading.

The restrictio­ns – especially with regard to the hospitalit­y and tourism sector (and the booze business) – do seem like a desperate attempt to bludgeon an invisible virus with regulation­s.

And, given that the third wave accelerati­on is well under way, especially in Gauteng, community transmissi­on of the virus is exploding – so restrictio­ns now won’t do much to control the damage.

It is true, too, that government has failed to get the vaccinatio­n programme moving – although negative developmen­ts in that area were often beyond its control.

There has also been rampant corruption – of which the allegation­s against suspended health minister Dr Zweli Mkhize are the most repugnant – and incompeten­ce, such as the failure to get the Charlotte Maxeke Johannesbu­rg Academic Hospital back on stream.

Yet, something had to be done.

People who refused to wear masks, keep to social distancing and did not sanitise – and who kept partying – had to be brought to heel.

If you won’t act like an adult, don’t be surprised if you’re treated like a child.

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