Zimbabwe Situation

Public Health Lock-down Order : Omicron Amendments 

BILL WATCH 78/2021

Source: Public Health Lock-down Order : Omicron Amendments – The Zimbabwean

Public Health Lock-down Order : Omicron Amendments

Following the appearance of a new variant of the SARS-Cov-2 virus, the Government announced further lock-down measures on Tuesday 30th November and gave them legal effect by enacting them in a statutory instrument yesterday.  The new instrument (SI 267/2021 gazetted on 1st December ) can be accessed on the Veritas website [linkand so can a consolidated version of the Lock-down Order incorporating the latest changes [link].

Travellers

Under the new measures all returning residents and visitors – i.e. everyone entering Zimbabwe – will have to undergo PCR testing even if they have been tested for COVID-19 elsewhere, and:

Curfew

The curfew which was in effect from 10 p.m. to 5:30 a.m. will now be imposed from 9 p.m. to 6 a.m.

The curfew does not apply to the following persons:

[The above list is only approximate and may contain errors because the Lock-down Order, when it deals with persons who are not subject to curfew, is so convoluted it ties itself into knots.]

Business Hours

Businesses, other than those providing essential services, can be open from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. daily.

Points to note:

Admission to Certain Premises

Customers are not allowed into restaurants, licensed premises and night clubs unless they show proof of that they have had two doses of a vaccine such as Sinovac, Sinopharm or Sputnik approved by the Ministry of Health (proof of full vaccination).

Comments

Duration of the new measures

It is not clear how long the new measures introduced by SI 267/2021 will remain in force.  The SI states that they:

“are to be put in place for a period of fourteen days, subject to review at the end thereof”

which makes it uncertain whether they will remain in force after the 14th December.  Probably not:  if after the 14-day period the Vice-President responsible for Health and Child Care – and presumably it is he who will review the measures – decides to extend them, he will no doubt publish a fresh statutory instrument.

Revision of the Lock-down Order

The Lock-down Order has now been amended 37 times and, as we have said repeatedly, it has become impossible to understand.  It needs to be revised completely, simplified and clarified.  Even the government’s drafters seem to realise this, because the new SI enacts the new measures without formally amending the original Lock-down Order.  The drafters would have faced an impossible task if they had tried to identify all the provisions that needed to be amended in order to implement the measures.

 

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

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