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S.Africa to deploy 73,000 more troops for lockdown
by Staff Writers
Johannesburg (AFP) April 22, 2020

Canada provinces seek military help to combat pandemic
Ottawa (AFP) April 22, 2020 - Canada's Ontario and Quebec provinces on Wednesday asked for the military to help overwhelmed staff at elderly care homes hard-hit by the coronavirus pandemic.

The requests came as Canada surpassed 2,000 COVID-19 deaths -- half of them at longterm care facilities.

Ontario Premier Doug Ford said soldiers are needed at five of the most affected care homes in the province, saying the coronavirus in these places is spreading like a "raging wildfire."

Ford did not specify how many troops were needed.

There have been 448 deaths at 128 of Ontario's care homes that reported outbreaks.

In Quebec, 4,000 elderly people living in retirement homes have been infected, representing more than eight out of 10 of the COVID-19 deaths in the province.

Quebec Premier Francois Legault told a news conference that he'd asked Ottawa to send 1,000 troops.

This is in addition to 130 military doctors and medics previously requested as reinforcements. Only half of those have been deployed so far.

"It will help us a lot to have lots of extra hands to do tasks that are less medical and help the staff," Legault said.

Ottawa was expected to respond to both provinces' requests on Thursday.

Quebec tried to quickly recruit 2,000 new staff for its long-term care facilities in recent weeks to ease the workload for existing staff struggling with coronavirus outbreaks, but only 350 have applied so far, the premier said.

Even with a salary top-up from the government, the jobs are relatively low-paying.

One of the worst cases in Montreal, where 31 elderly residents died after their caregivers fled the Herron nursing home, leaving them to fend for themselves, provoked a public outcry.

Another in Laval, north of Montreal, has recorded 69 COVID-19 deaths.

South African President Cyril Ramaphosa plans to deploy more than 73,000 extra troops to help implement a nationwide coronavirus lockdown, the defence minister said.

The country is four weeks into a strict police and military-enforced shutdown during which jogging, dog-walking and the sale of alcohol have been banned until the end of April.

Security forces have struggled to keep people indoors -- particularly in overcrowded townships -- and the police have been grappling with illegal alcohol sales, sometimes involving its own men.

In a letter to parliament tweeted by an opposition party leader, Ramaphosa announced his decision to deploy an additional 73,180 members of the South African National Defence Force (SANDF) until June 26.

The operation is expected to cost around 4.5 billion rand ($2.4 million / 2.2 million euros), said the letter, which was dated Tuesday.

Those deployed comprise regular, reserve and auxiliary personnel.

In March, 2,820 soldiers were mobilised for the lockdown.

Defence Minister Nosiviwe Mapisa-Nqakula confirmed the letter's authenticity on Wednesday.

"If you look at the numbers and the rate at which the infection has gone up, you will realise that at some point we may actually need the kind of human deployment which has never been seen before," Mapisa-Nqakula told local radio.

"We need to tighten and foresee (and) make sure that our people understand fully the dangers of getting this virus," she said, adding that soldiers were also deployed to assist the public and medical personnel.

"People need to understand that the laws and regulations... have been put in place to protect them," Mapisa-Nqakula added.

Democratic Alliance party leader John Steenhuisen, who tweeted the leaked letter, said it would be "the largest deployment of SANDF in post-democratic South Africa".

Speaking at a virtual coronavirus briefing on Wednesday, Steenhuisen called for "clear parameters" to determine "where the power of the army begins and where it ends".

South Africa's joint standing committee on defence -- to whom Ramaphosa's letter was addressed -- have received 28 complaints of abuse by army officials during the lockdown.

To date South Africa has recorded 3,465 cases of coronavirus, the continent's second-highest number of infections after Egypt.

The death toll remains relatively low, with 58 fatalities recorded so far. But health experts are bracing themselves for an exponential increase in cases in September.

Ramaphosa imposed a 21-day lockdown from March 27 and has since extended the shutdown until April 30.

On Tuesday, the president announced a $26 billion relief package to support the economy and the vulnerable during the pandemic.


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