The Citizen e-edition

When is lockdown here?

FOURTH WAVE: GOVT STILL ADOPTS NORMAL RISK-ADJUSTED APPROACH

Brian Sokutu – brians@citizen.co.za

More than 16 000 new cases of Covid yesterday, compared to 2 000 last week.

Despite an alarming upsurge in Covid numbers – complicated by the emergence of the omicron variant, government is seemingly uneasy about imposing a tighter lockdown due to economic concerns, with Health Minister Dr Joe Phaahla yesterday urging South Africans to vaccinate and adhere to non-pharmaceutical measures.

Responding to a question during a virtual media briefing on whether the country was poised for yet another lockdown, Phaahla said: “As we have long adopted a risk-adjusted approach to managing Covid in terms of social intervention and restriction measures, we are again approaching the current situation in the same manner.

“We needed just over a week to monitor the situation and see what measures should be taken.

“I would not want to pre-empt what comes out of the meeting in the coming week, which will among other things, look at the rapid rise [of patients] and the pressure in health facilities.

“Those two factors may determine whether the level of restrictions should be raised.

“All of us can play a role in reducing the regulatory level required by the wearing of masks – the key being to avoid big gatherings such as year-end functions and birthday parties,” said Phaahla.

Given a background of SA having lost 2.2 million jobs since December 2018 pre-Covid period, leading economist Mike Schussler warned against tighter lockdown restrictions, arguing government could not afford “another unemployment bloodbath, because we know that the consequences are going to be severe”.

Schussler told Saturday Citizen: “Government knows that most jobs were lost during lockdowns, related to the pandemic. People are hungry, angry and we are in a deep state of disaster, with unemployment numbers increasing.

“We should not be pushing any hard lockdowns other than social distancing, wearing of masks and washing of hands with soap.

“As far as possible, go along as normal by reducing the fears. Let people go away on holiday so waiters and chefs can get paid.

“Given the fact that we have so much hammering us – whether road blockages, Eskom or water shortages – we need the recovery more than anything else, because we are in a final stretch of failure.

“If we do another lockdown, we risk becoming a de facto failed state.”

Reflecting on the increase in number of cases, Phaahla conceded that there was “a steady rise in new infections per day”.

Explained Phaahla: “Analysis of the geographic distribution, showed these were limited to Gauteng and mainly in the Tshwane metro, some subdistricts and linked to a cluster at the TUT [Tshwane University of Technology] campus.

“The confirmation of the omicron variant in the Tshwane cluster explained the steep rise by last Thursday, when [experts] reported a spread to Johannesburg, Ekurhuleni, Sedibeng and West Rand districts.”

Phaahla said by early last December local scientists led by Prof Salim Abdool-Karim had “told us that we should expect more mutations leading to variants, some quite serious”.

“At the time we were being introduced to the beta variant.

“They warned new variants would generally be more transmissible but less severe.

“What we can say is that we knew the fourth wave was coming, but we didn’t know how soon and what special characteristics it would come with.”

FRONT PAGE

en-za

2021-12-04T08:00:00.0000000Z

2021-12-04T08:00:00.0000000Z

https://thecitizen.pressreader.com/article/281616718653272

The Citizen