President Cyril Ramaphosa extended bans on alcohol sales and most public gatherings for two weeks as the government struggles to bring a third wave of coronavirus infections under control.

The country will remain on virus alert level 4, the second highest, although there will be adjustments to some curbs, including allowing restaurants to resume operating at half their seating capacity and gyms to reopen, Ramaphosa said on Sunday night in a televised address. A night-time curfew will remain in place from 9pm to 4am and schools will remain shut until 25 July.

“We have had to make difficult decisions, knowing that almost every decision carries a cost to the economy and society,” Ramaphosa said. “We remain committed to do all that we can to mitigate the impact of the lockdown on people’s livelihoods.”

The extension of stringent restrictions will impede the economy’s recovery from its biggest contraction in a century last year, when it shrank 7%. In May, the central bank forecast that the output will expand 4.2% this year and 2.3% in 2022.

South Africa has had almost 2.2 million confirmed Covid-19 cases so far and over 63 000 of those who’ve been diagnosed with the disease have died. Excess natural death reports indicate the actual toll could be triple that.

Delta variant

“For the last two weeks, the country has consistently recorded an average of nearly 20 000 daily new cases,” Ramaphosa said. “At present, the country has over 200 000 active Covid-19 cases. In the last two weeks, over 4 200 South Africans have lost their lives to Covid-19.”

New cases have been fuelled by the spread of the highly infectious delta variant, which was first detected in India and is now South Africa’s dominant strain. Gauteng has been particularly hard hit and its hospitals are battling to cope with the patient influx.

Stop-start restrictions on alcohol sales, including an outright ban reimposed two weeks ago, are aimed at reducing trauma cases and discouraging social gatherings. The measures have curbed revenue for producers including South African Breweries, which is contesting them in court on the grounds that they violate the constitution.

Ramaphosa said the Unemployment Insurance Fund decided to extend temporary support workers who lost their income due to level-4 restrictions. Since its inception last year, the so-called Covid-19 relief plan has provided more than R60-billion to protect jobs, he said.

While the government was slow off the mark to begin administering vaccines, its inoculation programme has picked up over recent weeks and more than 4.2 million doses have been given so far. The number of vaccinations issued has doubled in the past month, with 190 000 shots being administered each week day, the president said.

Ramaphosa also announced that the African Union has reached an agreement with the European Union to bolster the supply of vaccines to the continent. Under the deal, Aspen Pharmacare will supply more than 17 million single-shot Johnson & Johnson doses to Africa over the next three months, and that number will double from October.

“There is a commitment by Johnson & Johnson to adapt the current arrangement, so that we can produce the vaccine in South Africa under licence rather than under contract,” he said. “We are negotiating that, in time, the drug substance itself would be produced here in South Africa, so that we have a fully-owned African vaccine manufactured on African soil in a number of countries.”  — Reported by Mike Cohen and Paul Vecchiatto, (c) 2021 Bloomberg LP

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