There are several activities that you are still not allowed to do under adjusted level 1 lockdown. Here are six of those things you still can’t do.
President Cyril Ramaphosa expressed his concerns about the recent brutal attacks on women in Women’s Month, saying SA men should step up to the plate.
The hospitality, liquor industry, and other businesses have called for a lift of the current restriction. Will that be the case? Here is what to expect tonight.
With the extension of adjusted level 4 lockdown, we look at the good, bad, and ugly of the address by the President and the current COVID-19 situation.
Sunday 4 July marks the final day of scheduled flight operations for three South African airlines due to lockdown level 4 travel restrictions.
Employers and employees are increasingly find themselves balancing what is ‘reasonable’ in the country’s unprecedented life and work circumstances.
According to a statement, surfers found a ‘perfectly legal’ way to bypass beach regulations at a beach in Cape Town.
The liquor industry said it’s seeing signs of a rise in black market alcohol sales. Here are SA’s latest lockdown booze prices:
Derbyshire Police’s actions were condemned by civil liberties advocacy organization Liberty, while former Guardian editor Kate Carter called the incident ‘absolutely insane’.
South Africa banned liquor sales amid coronavirus surge. In addition to the alcohol ban, the new restrictions include the closure of all beaches and public swimming pools in infectious hotspots as well as a curfew extension.
Professor Neil Ferguson’s Imperial College is widely credited with supposedly changing the UK government’s strategy from Sweden-style light touch to full lockdown.
Some of the key changes in the COVID-19 lockdown restrictions include accommodation, curfew and the selling of wine
Localised restrictions announced on 14 December are again wreaking havoc on the country’s ailing tourism sector, with the Garden Route and Eastern Cape taking the biggest knock.