JOHANNESBURG: On day four of a coronavirus lockdown, Ntombi Dlamini was ushered past shoppers snaking outside a mall in Johannesburg´s Alexandra township, where she had come to withdraw her social grant.
One of over 17 million South Africans who live off social grants from the state, the 60-year-old single grandmother was unable to stock up on groceries before the lockdown began. Shops were crammed and she was waiting for the grant, which she usually receives on the first day of each month.
With empty cupboards and four grandchildren to feed, Dlamini breathed a sigh of relief when the government brought forward the payment of social grants to the elderly and disabled to pre-empt overcrowding. "I am very very happy because there was no food," Dlamini told AFP, as she walked out of the shopping centre with much-needed cash in her purse. "But today we are going to eat," she exclaimed. "Now I can afford to buy food until after this coronavirus is over."
Many like Dlamini have grown concerned about their fate, as thousands of workers and businesses will now also rely on government funding to survive the 21-day shutdown. "We note the anxiety and fear that this pandemic has caused millions of South African families, especially the most vulnerable," said Social Development Minister Lindiwe Zulu last week. "There is no need to panic," she said. "Social grants will be paid from (the) 30 and 31 of this month."
In the southern city of Port Elizabeth, a major port in the poor Eastern Cape province, slow-moving queues stretched around blocks as people lined up in front of pay points. In the outlying Kwazakhele township, hundreds of elderly people pushed and shoved, ignoring welfare officials who tried to restore order and enforce social distancing. "We have been queueing like this over time, why stop us now," said an elderly woman who did not wish to be named, angrily waving her walking stick. "We don´t care about that virus," she grumbled. "We have children and grandchildren to feed."
Further down the line, 87-year-old Nomonde Maphai craned her neck to check on the queue. "I used my last bag of mealie meal (corn flour) so I have to buy some more today," she said, determined not to return home empty-handed.
The process was more orderly in Johannesburg, South Africa´s financial capital, where people were allowed to access pay points before official opening times. At the Pan African Mall in Alexandra, black tape on the ground marked a mandatory distance between customers -- though the space remained shorter than the recommended minimum of 1.5 metres. But the queue jumps were set up for those collecting social grants.
After pocketing their money, the elderly and disabled still had to battle their way through supermarkets and lug themselves home on erratic minibuses. "You can see my leg, I can´t even talk right now because it´s so painful," said Christine Mhlongo, 64, wincing as she hobbled past the checkout counter, clutching a bag of frozen chicken feet she bought with her disability grant.—
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