REFLECTING ON THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC AND GOVERNMENT’S RESPONSE IN ZIMBABWE

BACKGROUND
Sometime in March 2020, Zimbabwe introduced
mechanism to contain the COVID-19 pandemic.
These measures impacted on individuals,
companies, and civil society organisations. These
measures also impacted on the exercise of rights
like freedom of movement, freedom of assembly
and association, access to information and
media freedom among others. This brief unpacks
some of the responses by the Zimbabwean
government.
RESPONSES BY THE GOVERNMENT
On 19 March 2020, President Emmerson
Mnangagwa through the Statutory Instrument
76 of 2020 on Civil Protection (Declaration of
State of Disaster: Rural and Urban Areas of
Zimbabwe) declared COVID-19 as a national
disaster.
The government established a National COVID19 Response
Taskforce consisting
of
representatives from different ministries and it
was further divided into subcommittees that
were tasked:
•
•

with monitoring the pandemic situation
and coordinating the response
with mobilising financial resources
locally and internationally to cushion
the country from the negative impacts
of the pandemic.

On Monday 30 March 2020, the government
decreed the first 21 day lock-down through SI

2020-083 Public Health (COVID-19 Prevention,
Containment and Treatment) (National
Lockdown) Order, 2020.
Essential services were allowed to operate
during the pandemic and these essential services
included:
•
•
•
•
•
•

hospital and emergency services such as
fire brigade and ambulance services
water and electricity services
sanitary services
money transfer and exchange services
communication and telecommunication
services including the media
state security services

Among other things,
concurrently with:
•
•

•

the

lockdown

ran

the closure of primary and secondary
schools, as well as tertiary institutions.
restriction of non-essential local travel
and closure of borders (with exception
for returning citizens and commercial
traffic)
prohibition of public gatherings

Section 14 of SI 83 of 2020 criminalises any
publication or communication of false news
about any public officer, official or enforcement
officer involved in the enforcement or
implementation of the national lockdown
The regulations have been revised, tightened
and relaxed over time and more specifically in
January 2021 and also in July 2021, under what
has been termed the second and third wave of
the COVID 19 pandemic.

Select target paragraph3