‘Can I close my eyes?’ Ramaphosa has Covid-19 jab with Khayelitsha hospital staff
Image: Twitter/Cyril Ramaphosa
Image: Twitter/Athi Geleba
Mkhize and President Cyril Ramaphosa were then vaccinated alongside 16 health workers, including emergency medicine physician Dr Sa’ad Lahri, housekeeping staffer Mavuyo Mpambani and administration clerk Cwengisa Dadirai.
As a nurse prepared to vaccinate Ramaphosa in his upper left arm, he jokingly asked: "Can I close my eyes?" His vaccination was accompanied by the sounds of scores of camera shutters and followed by a round of applause.
“At first I was a bit terrified of this long needle that was going to be embedded into my arm, but it happened so quickly, so easily, it was just a prick on my flesh and I really did not feel much pain,” Ramaphosa said afterwards, describing the first vaccinations as a "real milestone" for SA.
"I was rather pleased that five people were vaccinated before me, they were healthworkers," he said.
"It was a joy to watch them, to see whether anything had happened to them," he said. "It means being vaccinated is a fairly straightforward process."
This was sufficient to vaccinate only about 10% of the health workers in the Western Cape, and they had been prioritised according to their roles and their comorbidities.
“So how can I jump the queue?” Mbombo told journalists outside the hospital.
Most of the vaccines sent to the Western Cape will be administered at the province's largest hospitals, Groote Schuur and Tygerberg.
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