Johannesburg – None of the 25
injured South Africans, who survived a building collapse in Nigeria, have been
discharged from hospital yet, the health department said on Wednesday.
“All of them are still in hospital,”
spokesperson Joe Maila said.
He could not answer questions about
those in lockdown as he was unaware of it.
“I don’t know about that, what does
that mean. I don’t know if doctors will be able to speak on the record of
patients.”
On Monday, Deputy Social Development
Minister Hendrietta Bogopane-Zulu told reporters in Pretoria that the 25
patients were under a 48-hour lockdown.
“Everybody coming out of Lagos is on
a 48-hour lockdown. They can’t leave the hospital until the 48 hours are over,”
she said at the time.
“Irrespective of the injury, all
patients are going to be here for 48 hours. You know that there are a lot of
airborne diseases in West Africa at this stage. They need to be fully
decontaminated.”
The families of the injured were
allowed around five minutes to see them when they arrived in South Africa on
Monday.
Social development department
spokesperson Lumka Oliphant could not be immediately reached for comment on
Wednesday.
The SABC this week reported that 10
of the injured had undergone surgery on Monday night as most of them had
sustained fractures.
Maila could not confirm this on
Tuesday.
Around 115 people, among them 84
South Africans, were killed and dozens trapped when the multi-storey guesthouse
attached to the Synagogue Church of All Nations, run by Nigerian preacher TB
Joshua, collapsed on Friday, 12 September.
About 350 South Africans were thought
to be visiting the church in Lagos when the building came down.
Take
From news24.com/SouthAfrica
South-Africa Puts Synagogue’s Survivors On A 48-Hour Lockdown
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Wednesday, September 24, 2014
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