Kuwait Times

South Africa scrambles to isolate prison virus cases as virus spreads

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PORT ELIZABETH: But it was already too late. The virus had already invaded her workplace, and was cutting a swathe through prisoners and staff alike. In the past two weeks, more than 55 inmates and 29 workers at the correction­al facility in East London have been diagnosed with the potentiall­y deadly disease. “This is a ticking time bomb,” said Ayanda Botha, whose nephew is serving a 10-year term at the overcrowde­d jail in eastern South Africa. “There is no physical distances in prisons, none at all,” he told AFP. “So how do you expect to contain the spread?”

The tale encapsulat­es the problem facing the world’s jails, where close confinemen­t is a red-carpet invitation to a respirator­y virus. Overcrowdi­ng and poor sanitation have prompted a growing number of countries to release low-risk prisoners after coronaviru­s was detected among inmates. Botha hoped South African authoritie­s would follow suit. The country has registered the highest number of coronaviru­s cases in Africa, with 2,605 infections, including 48 deaths.

Its 242 jails house around 160,000 inmates, according to official figures, although data on overcrowdi­ng is not available. So far, only four prisons say they have detected the disease, prompting government to opt for prevention rather than release. The authoritie­s are taking steps to disinfect facilities, reduce cell numbers and ensure infected inmates can isolate. Some of the East London cases - which has more than 300 inmates and employs some 80 staff will be treated in hospital.

Justice Minister Ronald Lamola assured that all infected prisoners had been put in single cells on a separate quarantine site. “We have absolute confidence in our Covid-19 measures and we are confident that they will lead to recoveries that will ‘give birth’ to a correction­al services free of the virus,” Lamola told reporters earlier this week. Family visits have also been restricted and testing ramped up in all detention centers. “Even with the testing, I am not convinced that the net will catch each and every prisoner,” said Botha, who remained worried.

‘Not taking it likely’ Coronaviru­s outbreaks in detention centers are often traced back to prison officials who contracted the disease outside office hours. The first case at the East London facility was a staff member who fell ill after attending a funeral in the nearly city of Port Elizabeth. South Africa’s correction­al services department said it was considerin­g how best to deal with “officials attending gatherings and movements from their residences to places of work”.

Two suspected coronaviru­s cases were meanwhile reported by the St Albans correction­al centre, on the outskirts of the city of Port Elizabeth in the same Eastern Cape province. Testing on Friday revealed that all inmates were negative. But a prisons social counselor said inmates had panicked at prospect of a Covid-19 outbreak. —AFP

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