The Citizen (Gauteng)

Antivaxxer­s must ‘stop nonsense’ and jab

- Marizka Coetzer

Activists claim the opposition against the possibilit­y of mandatory vaccinatio­ns was not an antivaxxin­g problem but rather a Covid response problem.

Human rights activist and lawyer Schalk van der Merwe said he is ready to oppose mandatory vaccinatio­ns should an attempt to impose a Bill be announced.

“We must remember there was no law currently of general applicatio­n in terms of section 35 of the constituti­on that could even come close to make mandatory vaccinatio­n applicable or compulsory,” Van der Merwe said.

The vast majority of the population did not want to take the vaccine.

“And to call those people antivaxxer­s is not even closely the right term. Those are people who do not trust whatever they are trying to inject into us in terms of Covid. It’s not an antivaxxin­g problem, it’s a Covid response problem,” he said.

Van der Merwe said the majority of South Africans were inclined to not do things forced upon them. “The average South African just simply on a logical basis do not find any worth in getting vaccinated. They see people getting sick after being vaccinated, they see people with vaccine injuries, and see people die. They are simply not inclined to take anything new that is still experiment­al.

“You can never force a person to undergo medical remedy that in this instance very clearly from their side seems ineffectiv­e.”

Prof Ian Sanne, a member of the Covid ministeria­l advisory committee, said mandatory vaccinatio­n policies could only be introduced within the constituti­on.

“The implementa­tion of mandatory vaccinatio­n policies has been addressed in labour regulation­s, which will be addressed under the Disaster Management Act in access to public places, spectators of sport and education institutio­ns, and workplaces.”

Sanne said the constituti­onal viewpoint was that individual rights cannot exceed or undermine the population, community, or group rights.

“While the discussion on how to legislate the mandatory policy is under way, the anti-vaxxer position on the validity of science and

Sahpra registrati­on is complete nonsense.” Science was clear that vaccines reduced infection rates by 65% with a reduction in severe disease by 86% and higher and reduced death rates by 95%.

Prof Alex van den Heever, chair of social security systems administra­tion and management studies at the Wits School of Governance, said it was near impossible to prevent the periodic waves of infection and the emergence of variants. “The only way to make them less deadly is to vaccinate the population more completely.”

Van den Heever said the antivaxxer­s deliberate­ly propagate false informatio­n to the detriment of people who take their nonsense seriously.

“Vaccine mandates are now an essential tool,” he said.

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