Cape Town becomes South Africa’s coronavirus hotspot
- Combination of densely populated townships and popular tourist sites blamed for high number of cases in Western Cape
- Number of new cases is accelerating sharply in country while cases across Africa double in less than three weeks

The Western Cape has emerged as the epicentre of South Africa’s coronavirus outbreak, with about two-thirds of the country’s confirmed cases.
Cape Town, the province’s biggest population centre, also accounts for about three-quarters of all deaths reported in the country.
Meanwhile, health experts expressed concern after the number of cases in Africa as a whole has doubled in less than three weeks.
On Thursday, the South African ministry of health confirmed 3,147 new cases, raising the total to 58,568. Coronavirus-related deaths rose to 1,284 – 966 of which were reported in the Western Cape.
The province’s high presence of Covid-19 cases is attributed to the region’s poor, densely populated townships like Khayelitsha, a shantytown of nearly 500,000 people.
It is also suspected that Cape Town’s mountains and beaches, which are popular with tourists, may have contributed to the high number of cases.