6,000 tourists to be processed in Cape Town Stadium before flying home
The world-class stadium has been urgently transformed into a facility to meticulously process thousands of foreign tourists.
A general view of Cape Town Stadium with table mountain in the back during day 2 of the HSBC Cape Town Sevens semi final, match between South Africa and Fiji at Cape Town Stadium on December 09, 2018 in Cape Town, South Africa. (Photo by Ziyaad Douglas/Gallo Images)
The stadium hosted the 2010 Soccer World Cup, then rock concerts, then rugby matches – and even a world record tennis match between global superstars Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal.
But now the world-class facility has been urgently transformed into a facility to meticulously process thousands of foreign tourists.
This initiative is being led by the Western Cape Provincial Disaster Management Centre in collaboration with multiple state agencies, including the national government, Port Health, City of Cape Town, Airports Company of South Africa, Wesgro and a host of foreign embassies and consulates.
The stadium’s CEO, Lesley de Reuck, said: “When we got the call from the provincial government, it wasn’t a tough decision to make.
“This is a stressful time for the country, it’s a stressful time for individuals, and for the world. Can you imagine going through this kind of stress and you aren’t in your own country? So we wanted to play a very small role in a very big plan.
“The logistics are working very well at the moment.”
The deputy director in the Western Cape department of transport and public works, Faizel Williams, said: “It’s been a phenomenal team effort by everyone who has been involved. It just shows you what is possible when government departments collaborate. Over the next two weeks, we have an ongoing schedule of repatriation flights.”
The consul general of the German consulate in Cape Town, Matthias Hansen, told News24: “It’s going very smoothly. Yesterday [Tuesday], was our third repatriation flight from Cape Town – we had the first two on Friday and Saturday.
“Since the beginning of the crisis, we had roughly 4,000 German tourists in the consular district – which includes the Northern, Eastern and Western Cape. It is our objective to have all of those who want to be repatriated, repatriated,” Hansen said.
He added he had given all returning tourists a “farewell speech”.
“I have asked all tourists for a real understanding of the measures which the South African government is taking, to fight the virus – which I think are necessary and very important.
“Secondly, I ask them all if, at all possible, to come back to South Africa. Their time in South Africa may have been cut short and ended in a rather unusual manner, but there are lots of things to see. It’s a wonderful country, with warm-hearted people, and there’s every reason to come back,” Hansen said.
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