Little has been done to reduce alcohol-related harm since 2017, even though the Covid-19 pandemic made plain the risks associated with weak regulation of alcohol sales and consumption. Yet another mass killing has taken place at a liquor outlet in South Africa, this time at a shebeen inside a hostel in Saulsville, Tshwane. The event highlights multiple challenges.
These include the continued existence of poorly managed hostels well into the post-apartheid era; the ongoing use of firearms for criminal and “dispute-resolution” purposes; extended operating hours and the presence of minors; and the lack of effective steps to eliminate unlicensed liquor outlets. That the place was unlicensed is not the key issue, however. Similar events take place frequently at licensed outlets, too.
A visit to the premises by National Police Commissioner Fannie Masemola and condemnation of the incident by President Cyril Ramaphosa both serve as a reminder of two critical issues: These challenges were highlighted by Working for an Alcohol-Safer South Africa (Wassa) during our recent Summit on Substance Use and Illicit Trafficking, hosted by the Central Drug Authority. The authority, which advises the Minister of Social Development, is responsible for drafting and monitoring the National Drug Master Plan, while the Department of Social Development produces the country’s policy on the prevention and treatment of substance-use disorders. Because alcohol is classified as a drug, albeit a legal one, both the drug master plan and the substance-use policy include recommendations to reduce the harms caused by alcohol.
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But neither the drug authority nor the Department of Social Development has the authority to implement their own recommendations, since national liquor policy falls under the Department of Trade, Industry and Competition (DTIC), while provincial liquor policy sits with economic development departments (except in the Western Cape, where it is located in the Department of Community Safety). Complicating this further is the Constitution’s allocation of exclusive responsibility for retail liquor licensing to provinces. As a result, the national government has limited authority over where, when and how alcohol is sold and consumed.
There is also confusion about the extent of police authority over licensed outlets. The only clear consensus is that the police are expected to close down unlicensed shebeens – something they have repeatedly failed to do, as the Saulsville killings illustrate. The DTIC’s Liquor Amendment Bill of 2016 proposed several measures to strengthen harm-reduction efforts.
Nine years later, nothing suggests it will become law. The EFF introduced a separate Bill to regulate the sale of alcohol earlier this year.
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