Covid-19: DA calls on Dirco to use its budget to help stranded South Africans abroad
Kroutz said: “We came to Lima but soon found out that there was no flight organised. For a few days, we all stayed in an apartment but it was too expensive for me.”
She is staying with different families in her church group who have agreed to keep her for a few days at a time, but the language barrier has been a problem.
“It is very scary, because when I move to people’s houses I don’t know whether I’ll get sick. I don’t know who I’ll end up living with.
“I am struggling financially because I am not getting paid.”
Another member of the group, Neil Visser, 37, was also teaching English in Cusco. He is paying to stay in an apartment.
“I am having to use some of my savings and get some assistance from my family. What upsets us is that other embassies [in other countries] got [South African] citizens repatriated but not us.”
Assistance
Department of International Relations and Cooperation spokesperson Lunga Ngqengelele said the department was working on this and other repatriations.
He urged those stuck abroad to register with the embassies.
“We can assure them that we are doing our level best to bring back stranded South Africans,” Ngqengelele said.
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The group is being assisted by Home Away From Home.
Its project leader, Darren Dergman, said South America was a difficult place for repatriations because South Africans were scattered all over and it was difficult to get them all in one place for a flight.
He said one option was to somehow get them to North America where they could charter a fight.