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Reuters
Reuters
Health

South Africa tightens restrictions further as COVID-19 infections rise

FILE PHOTO: An informal car-guard stands before a closed bar and restaurant in Long Street, normally bustling with foreign tourists, as coronavirus disease (COVID-19) lockdown regulations ease in Cape Town, South Africa, August 24, 2020. REUTERS/Mike Hutchings

South Africa imposed further COVID-19 restrictions on Monday, closing down beaches on the eastern coast and limiting large public gatherings ahead of the festive season, as the country looks to slow a sharp rise in infections.

South Africa, which has recorded 866,127 total coronavirus cases, has seen a sharp spike in infections since the start of December with reported cases hovering around 8,000 per day in last few days, from around 3,000 in November.

The country's reported daily cases in the first wave peaked at around 14,000 in July.

"Given the rate at which new cases have grown over the last two weeks, there is every possibility that if we do not act urgently ... the second wave will be more severe than the first wave," President Cyril Ramaphosa said in a televised address.

Alcohol sales will now be permitted only between Monday and Thursday, and the curfew will start one hour earlier and be from 2300 to 0400, he said.

Ramaphosa said the main reasons for the sudden rise in cases have been large gatherings and travel.

Beaches and public parks in districts with the highest number of infections will be closed from Dec. 16 to Jan. 3 in the tourism hotspots of the Eastern Cape and the Garden Route.

Some other beaches will also be closed and on others festivals, live music and live performances will be prohibited, he said. Restaurants and bars will have to close by 10 p.m. across the country.

The sweeping restrictions just before the festive season will batter the hospitality, travel and tourism industry which was the hardest hit in the first lockdown in April.

Ramaphosa said South Africa has concluded all processes to ensure its participation in the World Health Organization's COVAX facility and initial vaccines will cover 10% of its population in the early part of next year.

(Reporting by Promit Mukherjee; Editing by Mfuneko Toyana and Sonya Hepinstall)

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