Zimbabwe Situation

Public Health Lock-down Order : New Restrictions 

BILL WATCH 39/2021

Source: Public Health Lock-down Order : New Restrictions – The Zimbabwean

Since our last bulletin on the subject there have been several amendments to the Lock-down Order, the most important of which were contained in SI 153A/2021 [link] which imposed a special lock-down in Kwekwe district;  SI 170/2021 [link] which extended the lock-down to Hurungwe and Kariba districts and tightened restrictions elsewhere;  and SI 183/2021 [link] which imposes restrictions on travellers who have come from or passed through India, and extends the special lock-down, with some additional restrictions, on Makonde District.

A consolidated version of the Lock-down Order can be accessed on the Veritas website [link].

In this Bill Watch we shall explain the recent amendments.

Passenger Transport

Passengers can be carried in public service vehicles but:

These requirements are specified in a new section 5(1)(c) [wrongly numbered as 5(1)(b)] inserted in the Order by SI 170/2021.

Partial Return to Previous Higher Level [IV] Lock-down

A new section 26E has been inserted in the Lock-down Order, again by SI 170/2021, which re-imposes some restrictions that had previously been lifted.  These new restrictions will last until the 27th June and, it should be noted, apply throughout the country.  They are:

Funerals

No more than 30 people may gather at a funeral.

Passenger transport

Passenger transport services may continue to operate so long as they observe the precautions noted above, and so long as their vehicles are provided by ZUPCO.

Tobacco auctions and mining operations

Tobacco auctions and mines may continue functioning, but in the case of tobacco auctions the following requirements must be observed:

Other businesses in the formal sector

Businesses in the formal commercial and industrial sector can remain open, subject to the general restrictions laid down in the Order and, in addition, to the following:

Sporting activities

Medium-risk and high-risk sports are prohibited for the period of the lock-down.  Only low-risk sports are allowed, so long as participants observe “previously approved COVID-19 protocols”.  It is not clear what exactly this means, but presumably participants and spectators must observe social distancing, wear face masks, have their temperatures taken and their hands sanitised, and must not share sporting equipment, clothing and towels, and must observe the other requirements of section 18 of the Lock-down Order.  The Sports and Recreation Commission has published a list of low-risk sports which are allowed.  They are:

Angling Aquatics Archery
Athletics Badminton Bass (fishing?)
Chess Cricket Cycling
Draughts Equestrian Golf
Horse racing Lawn Bowls Motor sports
Polo Polo Crosse Rowing
Shooting Table tennis Tennis
Teqball Triathlon Woodball

Gyms are not allowed to open.

Informal sector

So-called “people’s markets” can operate but must close no later than 6 p.m.  Everyone in such markets must observe social distancing and wear face masks and must have their temperatures taken and their hands sanitised.

Travellers

People entering Zimbabwe from India and from “COVID-19 infection hotspots” – i.e. SADC countries declared to be hotspots by the Vice-President – will have to undergo stringent quarantines.  They will be tested on arrival and if found positive for COVID-19 will be taken to an isolation centre and kept there at their own expense.  For how long is not stated.  Even if they test negative they will have to be quarantined for 10 days at a hotel at their own expense, and at the end of that 10-day period they will be tested again.

Special Lock-downs in Kwekwe, Kariba, Hurungwe and Makonde Districts

SIs 170/2021 and 183/2021 extend the special lock-down applicable to Kwekwe so that it applies to Kariba, Hurungwe and Makonde Districts as well.  This lock-down will end on the 27th June.  The restrictions in all four districts are the following, namely:

Anyone breaching these restrictions will be liable to a fine of up to ZW$800 000 or up to a year in prison.

Comment

As we have pointed out in previous bulletins, the Lock-down Order has been amended so many times – 27 to date – that it has become very difficult to understand.  So difficult indeed that the authors of the latest amendments seem not entirely sure what is in the Order and what is not.  Provisions relating to the quarantining of travellers from India were repealed by SI 153A/2021, probably in error, then referred to in SI 170/2021 even though they had been repealed, and then reinstated by SI 183/2021.  If even the authors are confused, the general public cannot be expected to understand precisely what is expected of them.

COVID-19 is likely to be with us for a long time to come and there will be a continuing need for precautions to be taken against it.  It is essential that the law imposing the precautions should be as easy to understand as possible.  The sooner the Order is completely revised and reissued in a simplified form the better it will be for us all.

Veritas makes every effort to ensure reliable information, but cannot take legal responsibility for information supplied.

Back to Home page