Liquor licence holders and their patrons can breathe a sigh of relief as the ban on the sale of booze has been lifted at last following a the gradual waning of the second wave of Covid-19 infections.
This was announced by President Cyril Ramaphosa in his address to the nation on Monday night.
Businesses will need to close by 10pm to allow their customers and staff to return home by curfew including cinemas; theatres; casinos; museums, public swimming pools; beaches and public parks; botanical gardens, and gyms and fitness centres and businesses offering wine tastings.
International air travel also remains restricted for OR Tambo Airport, King Shaka Airport and Cape Town Airport.
Religions gatherings may now not consist of more than 100 people outdoors and 50 people indoors.
Should the venue be too small to accommodate these numbers, no more than 50% of the venue’s capacity should be occupies and social distancing should be maintained throughout with mask wearing mandatory the entire time.
Beginning the month of February with two milestones in the national fight against the pandemic, Ramaphosa earlier today welcomed the first consignment of Covid-19 vaccines which landed from India.
This as the the country’s number of active cases of virus dropped to 109,977. At the peak of the second wave, active cases in the country hit over 200,000 by mid January.
The first 1,2 million doses of the vaccine would go to front-line healthcare workers, according to Ramaphosa .
For more news your way, download The Citizen’s app for iOS and Android.
Download our app and read this and other great stories on the move. Available for Android and iOS.