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South Africa battles rapid rise of COVID-19 in Johannesburg and beyond; restrictions ordered

A crowd of people hold signs including "March to Save Lives" and "We Want a Vaccine."
Members of the Economic Freedom Fighters stage a protest in Pretoria, South Africa, on Friday, demanding that vaccines from China and Russia be included in the country’s vaccine rollout.
(Let Pretorius / Associated Press)
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A rapid resurgence of the coronavirus is slamming South Africa’s largest city, Johannesburg, and threatens to overwhelm its hospitals.

Faced with the increase, apparently driven by the Delta variant, first discovered in India, President Cyril Ramaphosa on Sunday reintroduced tough restrictions including a ban on alcohol sales and an extended nightly curfew.

Johannesburg, a city of 5 million, and the surrounding Gauteng province account for about 60% of the country’s new daily infections. South Africa’s seven-day rolling average of daily new cases doubled over the last two weeks from 10 new cases per 100,000 people on June 10 to 22 per 100,000 people on Thursday, according to Johns Hopkins University.

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South Africa’s rising cases are part of a rampant resurgence across Africa with a peak that is expected to exceed those of earlier waves as the continent’s 54 countries struggle to vaccinate even a small percentage of their populations.

The steep rise of cases in Gauteng has not yet reached its peak, bringing authorities to consider increased restrictions on public gatherings and liquor sales. South Africa’s vaccination drive has had a slow start. To date, about 2.5 million people in the country of 60 million have received at least one jab.

The 35-year-old man was swimming off the San Mateo County coast. The beach was ordered closed.

June 26, 2021

The military has sent medical personnel to help treat the growing number of patients. Hospitals in Gauteng province are so full that many patients are being sent to medical facilities hours away in Mpumalanga and North West provinces, Lucky Mpeko, a director at QRS ambulance services, told the Associated Press.

“The normal practice is that a patient must be taken to the closest hospital to their home, but that has not been possible because hospitals are full; they do not have beds,” said Mpeko.

“Even when you are allowed to bring a patient to a hospital,” he said, “you will have queue [wait in line] for two or three hours while they try to find space for your patient.”

Mpeko said taxis, under normal circumstances, take 30 to 45 minutes to transport a patient to a hospital, but now the time is often hours because they must drive such long distances.

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The Beta variant, first identified in South Africa, continues to dominate here. The Alpha and Delta variants are also here, but they are responsible for a minority of cases, according to health experts.

This week, health faculty at the University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg demonstrated against the government’s management of the crisis and called on authorities to urgently reopen Charlotte Maxeke Hospital in Johannesburg, a designated COVID-19 center. Some parts of the hospital were gutted by a fire in April, and more than 700 patients were evacuated. Initially, officials said the hospital would be reopened within two weeks, but two months later it’s still closed.

“It is having a huge impact. We are talking about a 1,000-bed hospital being closed in the middle of a pandemic, with a wave that is not comparable to the ones we previously had,” said professor Johnny Mahlangu, head of Wits university’s pathology school and a participant in the protests.

“This hospital has been declared as a COVID-19 treating facility and it is missing in action, and that is negatively affecting us,” he said. “The province is currently under siege from the pandemic, and opening this facility will help us manage it.”

On Friday, the opposition Economic Freedom Fighters protested in the capital, Pretoria, against the slow pace of vaccinations.

South Africa’s sluggish rate of vaccinations is blamed for contributing to the new surge. The country has had a shortage of vaccines, among other problems causing delays.

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On Thursday, acting Health Minister Mamoloko Kubayi-Ngubane announced South Africa would soon include people age 50 years and older as eligible to be vaccinated as the country sought to expand its inoculations. So far, vaccinations have been limited to healthcare workers, people 60 and older, and schoolteachers.

This week, 300,000 doses of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine were allocated to start vaccinating teachers and other workers in the education sector.

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