South Africa News

South Africans breathe fire – react to Prisoners getting Covid-19 vaccine before ordinary citizens

Many tax-paying citizens around the world have reacted to Covid-19 vaccine rollouts prioritizing prisoners before residents, a strategy South Africa has also adopted.

In Monday night’s “family meeting”, President Cyril Ramaphosa confirmed that after healthcare and frontline workers receive their jabs, prisoners, as well as essential workers, those residing in old age homes, people over 60, and adults with co-morbidities will receive the vaccine.

This is phase two of the three-phase approach, expected to target around 16 million people.

prisoners

Only in phase three will the remainder of the adult population, roughly 22.5 million people, receive vaccines.

Enraged citizens took to social media to voice their discontent over the government’s decision, with the general sentiment indicating that law-abiding, tax-paying citizens have the right to receive their vaccines first and that prisoners forfeited that right when they committed a crime.

However, the news of prisoners receiving vaccines is not new.

Since last year, during a panel discussion on SABC’s Morning Live, Professor Barry Schoub explained that prisoners are at risk of spreading the virus fast, as they are confined to smaller spaces.

During a vaccine rollout presentation to the parliamentary committee on health, health minister Zweli Mkhize labelled prisons as “congregate settings”. Others included in this category are those working in educational institutions, as well as in the hospitality sector.

The World Health Organisation (WHO) has anticipated a reaction to the vaccine rollout, especially due to most adults without co-morbidities receiving their injections last.

“WHO believes that everyone, everywhere could benefit from safe and effective Covid-19 vaccines should have access as quickly as possible, starting with the at highest risk of serious disease or death.”

In May, 19,000 inmates guilty of petty theft were authorized to be released on parole to curb the rapid spread of the virus in prisons.

Those prioritized during this process had underlying health problems, were elderly, and were female offenders with infants.

Justice and correctional services minister Ronald Lamola said last year that overcrowding presented a significant challenge, due to the virus spreading so fast in closed spaces.

-The Citizen

In other news – Touching video goes viral: Woman helplessly screams for help as she fails to breathe at Durban hospital

A viral video of a woman shouting for help and patients lying on the floor while waiting for their Covid-19 results has spurred the KwaZulu-Natal Department of Health into making major adjustments at Durban’s Wentworth Hospital.

Woman helplessly screams for help as she fails to breathe at Durban hospital

On Monday, KZN Health MEC Nomagugu Simelane-Zulu, said they were made aware about the video and a team was dispatched to the hospital to investigate. Learn More

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