The South African government is considering reimposing several curbs aimed at containing the coronavirus pandemic as fears mount about a second wave of infections, according to three officials familiar with the situation.
The option of reintroducing the restrictions is likely to be
on the table when the National Coronavirus Command Council meets this week,
said the officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the information
hasn’t been made public.
South Africa introduced one of the world’s most stringent
lockdowns on March 27, and progressively eased it to restart the economy as the
number of new virus cases declined.
The trend has reversed in several areas over recent weeks,
with the Eastern Cape province, in particular, showing an alarming rise in
infections, and the authorities have voiced concern that the public is failing
to exercise sufficient caution.
“When we fail to wear a mask at a social gathering, when we
attend crowded events, we are not only putting ourselves and others at risk,”
President Cyril Ramaphosa wrote in his weekly newsletter published on Monday.
“We are also putting our economic recovery in jeopardy.”
Of the 737,278 people diagnosed with the disease in the
country so far, more than 90% have recovered, while 19,089 have died, according
to health department data.
The National Coronavirus Command Council will consider
inputs from a range of experts when it meets this week, and its recommendations
will be presented to the cabinet on 13 November, minister in the Presidency
Jackson Mthembu said. Ramaphosa will then address the nation on the way forward
later this week, he told reporters on 5 November.
The pandemic’s resurgence is posing a challenge for the
country’s Independent Electoral Commission, which is holding by-elections in 95
municipal wards where councilors have died or resigned. All voting has
suspended for the past seven months.
Stringent health protocols will be put in place and lines of
voters will be spread out, Sy Mamabolo, the commission’s chief executive
officer told reporters on Monday. Special votes will be cast on Tuesday,
including several that are being held at Covid-19 isolation facilities.
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