The number of coronavirus cases in South Africa jumped yesterday to more than 900 and President Cyril Ramaphosa called for richer countries to help African nations deal with the economic fallout, hours before the start of a countrywide lockdown.
The president underwent a test on Tuesday on the advice of doctors and received a negative result on Wednesday night.
“We now have more than 900 people who are infected, as the minister told me, and we fear that it might rise even much further than that,” the president said in Pretoria.
“We as Africa have called upon the countries of the G20, particularly the more developed economies, to support stimulus packages to Africa,” he said, adding that they had also called for IMF and World Bank debt relief.
Ramaphosa has been praised for ordering some of the toughest measures on the continent, including a 21-day lockdown to begin today from midnight.
He has deployed the army to support the police.
But the lockdown threatens to cripple an economy already beset by power cuts and shrinking since the end of last year.
“I’ve got two months cash in the bank. Nothing more. After that, we close down,” Rajan Govender, 51, said at his family-run Indian restaurant in a Johannesburg suburb as he prepared to send staff on compulsory paid leave. “We can weather a few weeks, but not longer.”
Mining and metal refining companies, the core of South Africa’s economy, are either reducing or shutting down production altogether.
Mines Minister Gwede Mantashe said on Wednesday that South Africa would continue to process platinum group metals, even as gold, chrome, manganese are scaled down.
The rand has hovered around four-year lows for the past two and a half weeks, and yesterday weakened from a brief respite, as relief faded over an announcement by the central bank of a quantitative easing programme.
State power utility Eskom has applied for its critical staff to be exempt from the stay-at-home order so electricity supplies will not be interrupted.
It has said coal supplies are adequate.
Businesses are bracing for further damage from the lockdown, with Airlink becoming the latest local airline to suspend flights from midnight yesterday.
State-owned South African Airways (SAA), already massively unprofitable and with an unsustainable debt burden, has also cancelled flights.
SAA’s creditors have authorised an extension of a deadline for the airline’s business rescue plan until May 29, the airline’s administrators said yesterday.
The Banking Association of South Africa (BASA) said the industry would try to help customers suffering with the economic fallout of the coronavirus, but without the kind of fiscal back-up on offer elsewhere in the world, their options were relatively limited.
Banks will, on a case-by-case basis, help customers that were in good standing and up to date on their commitments, with options including payment deferral, debt restructuring or bridging loans, BASA said.
“If government is able to create some fiscal space for us then we can do more,” BASA managing director Cas Coovadia told Reuters, adding the sector could not take steps that would harm its credibility.

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