Get the 99.5% that won’t die back to work - UCT medical students of '93

Loading player...
The calls for government to lift the lockdown, even if it is just partial, have been growing louder. Recently, it came from an informal sector expert GG Alcock who told the stories of the street traders who were initially banned from buying from markets and later allowed to sell cold food like vegetables, but were still suffering. And Dr Theuns Eloff who said the lockdown can lead to deaths if GDP plunges; to name but a few. And now medical students from the University of Cape Town have added their voices to calls for the lockdown to be relieved. Speaking for the group to Alec Hogg, Dr Fred Tyler said “even before the pandemic, more people died from poverty than from normal flu.” His fear is not that people will die of the coronavirus but from poverty. President Cyril Ramaphosa has announced an extraordinary budget of R500bn to deal with poverty and hunger during the lockdown and said he will review the restrictions and announce a decision tomorrow. What many people are asking of the President is not to give them food or handouts; they want to be allowed to work so that they can feed their families. – Linda van Tilburg Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
22 Apr 2020 12PM English South Africa Investing · Business News

Other recent episodes

Juanita Du Preez: Mchunu, Mkhwanazi, Masemola, Matlala, Mashatile…

The fusion of crime and South African politics remains in the headlines. In her latest interview with Chris Steyn, Action Society's National Spokesperson, Juanita du Preez, comments on Special Leave Police Minister Senzo Mchunu resuming his duties as a member of the African National Congress (ANC) NEC; KwaZulu-Natal Provincial Commissioner…
31 Mar 9AM 13 min

BNC#8 Piet le Roux Q&A - Economy, policy, and the crisis no one talks about

A hard-hitting conversation with Piet le Roux confronts South Africa’s uncomfortable truths: slowing growth, rising policy risks, and fragile infrastructure. While not yet a full crisis, warning signs are intensifying. The discussion challenges complacency, urging honest language about transformation policies and their consequences. It highlights the limits of politics alone…
31 Mar 8AM 24 min