* S.Africa in fourth month of lockdown restrictions
* Gradual reopening has led to return of power cuts
By Mfuneko Toyana
JOHANNESBURG, July 22 (Reuters) - Keitumetse Modise was
already struggling to juggle her appointments as a freelance
beautician while home-schooling her daughter during South
Africa's nearly four-month-old COVID-19 lockdown. The last thing
she needed was the lights going out.
But after being forced to turn kitchen tables into
classrooms and bedrooms into home offices, pandemic-weary South
Africans now face an added challenge in the form of a familiar
headache: rolling blackouts.
Months of pandemic-induced shutdown and reduced demand had
actually resulted in uncharacteristically reliable electricity
for those stuck at home, as South Africa's creaking grid was
given some respite.
Since last week however, with restrictions easing and
businesses cautiously reopening, planned blackouts - known
locally as loadshedding - are back and with them the frustration
of unstable internet, lost revenue and disrupted schedules.
Modise, a 33-year-old single mother, has had to push back
work appointments to ensure she can help with online schoolwork
when there is power. "You do what you have to," she said.
South Africa, the continent's most advanced economy,
suffered its worst ever power cuts late last year as
debt-crippled state utility Eskom imposed cuts to ward off a
grid overload.
After nearly four months without nationwide outages, Eskom
conducted a fresh round in July, with a spokesman saying "it
would be naive to think we are done."
Many South Africans now expect them to again become a part
of daily life, complicating efforts to work and learn online.
Focused power cuts targeting mainly poor townships with unpaid
electricity bills have meanwhile continued.
The timing could hardly be worse. Now a global COVID-19 hot
spot, South Africa is hurtling towards the peak of its outbreak,
topping 380,000 total infections this week.
Schools reopened for some year groups but millions of
children are still trying to follow lessons from home.
Primary school teacher Ronald Maswanganyi has faced two
weeks of power cuts, sometimes in the middle of his teaching.
"There's nothing I can do except call my boss, the
principal, and tell him I can't continue with the lesson," he
said.
The return of loadshedding also threatens to deepen economic
misery in a country already in a recession, with the
unemployment rate topping 30% before the pandemic hit. Things
have only worsened with widespread layoffs.
Wellness firm Body20 lost 30% of its revenue due to the
lockdown, so began offering personal trainer sessions online.
"Our frustration is that no matter how much you try to adapt
and innovate to cope with something as catastrophic as COVID-19,
suddenly you don't have electricity," said Body20's CEO Philip
Hughes.