Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Covid surge a time to unite, not bicker

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FORGET the small distractio­n caused by the Health Department’s bungle in announcing the new Covid-19 regulation­s.

Yes, Health Minister Joe Phaahla first opposed legal action accusing him of limiting the time for people to comment on new health regulation­s, before doing a backflip and extending the comment period by three months to July.

Yes, Phaahla first announced that children would not have to wear masks, before backtracki­ng and ordering that pupils should cover up in class.

However, the bigger, more important picture is that a fifth wave of infections is well under way, with, as usual, KwaZulu-Natal and Gauteng leading the charge.

More than 6 000 infections on Wednesday and nearly 10 000 on Thursday leave no room for doubt: this is an emergency which requires immediate interventi­on to prevent wider infection and a recurrence of the conditions which led to the draconian – but necessary – lockdown initiated in early 2020.

And the regulation­s announced are not onerous.

They include wearing masks indoors and in enclosed spaces, including on public transport.

Accommodat­ion establishm­ents can hire out rooms to 100% of capacity, but masks are to be worn in common areas.

And masks are to be worn in schools.

With more than a third (34.2%) of positive tests in the 10- to 14-year-old age group, this is a common-sense approach, as are the other regulation­s, including those which require proof of vaccinatio­n or negative tests.

People can still move around and mingle, and business can operate – as long as sensible precaution­s are taken.

With the flu season fast approachin­g, it is essential that the country gets a handle on the situation fast, before infections spiral out of control.

This is not the time to bicker over the period allocated for public comment concerning the regulation­s.

This is a time for the country to unite in a common effort to fight infection, including encouragin­g vaccinatio­n, the taking of booster shots to increase immunity, and adherence to preventive measures.

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