News / National
Night vigils, crossover parties outlawed
28 Dec 2021 at 02:07hrs | Views
POLICE have announced that churches and other religious organisations' traditional night vigils and crossover services have been banned.
Zimbabwe is under Level Two lockdown and Government has revised curfew hours which are now between 9PM and 6PM.
Some churches have been advertising all night prayer meetings, cross over sermons and other activities to usher in 2022. The police said such gatherings will be a violation of the curfew hours.
National police spokesperson, Assistant Commissioner Paul Nyathi said police will arrest those who violate the law.
"People know that we have a curfew running from 9PM to 6AM which means no gathering is allowed after 9PM. Police will therefore enforce the curfew order and anyone who violates it risks being arrested. There are no all-night prayers, all-night gatherings, crossover sermons that will be allowed this year," said Asst Comm Nyathi.
He said churches are expected to lead by example and as such are not expected to violate curfew hours.
"Churches should also take Covid-19 preventive measures such as sanitisation when people enter the church, wearing of face masks and social distancing. Churches mustn't disregard these safety regulations," said Asst Comm Nyathi.
He said as people celebrate during the festive season, they should not throw caution to the wind.
"People mustn't get over-excited and the WHO has made it clear that they should not engage in activities that are super-spreaders of the pandemic. They must limit their travels and stay at home," said Asst Comm Nyathi.
Last week, more than 100 people were arrested for violating Covid-19 protocols by mainly drinking at bars and shebeens in violation of the curfew hours.
Zimbabwe is under Level Two lockdown and Government has revised curfew hours which are now between 9PM and 6PM.
Some churches have been advertising all night prayer meetings, cross over sermons and other activities to usher in 2022. The police said such gatherings will be a violation of the curfew hours.
National police spokesperson, Assistant Commissioner Paul Nyathi said police will arrest those who violate the law.
"People know that we have a curfew running from 9PM to 6AM which means no gathering is allowed after 9PM. Police will therefore enforce the curfew order and anyone who violates it risks being arrested. There are no all-night prayers, all-night gatherings, crossover sermons that will be allowed this year," said Asst Comm Nyathi.
He said churches are expected to lead by example and as such are not expected to violate curfew hours.
"Churches should also take Covid-19 preventive measures such as sanitisation when people enter the church, wearing of face masks and social distancing. Churches mustn't disregard these safety regulations," said Asst Comm Nyathi.
He said as people celebrate during the festive season, they should not throw caution to the wind.
"People mustn't get over-excited and the WHO has made it clear that they should not engage in activities that are super-spreaders of the pandemic. They must limit their travels and stay at home," said Asst Comm Nyathi.
Last week, more than 100 people were arrested for violating Covid-19 protocols by mainly drinking at bars and shebeens in violation of the curfew hours.
Source - The Chronicle