A Zimbabwean national has been arrested in South Africa for selling essential services permit to business people to operate during the ongoing coronavirus lockdown.
Police spokesperson Ndivhuwo Mulamu said members of public in Olivenhoutbosch town in Gauteng province tipped off the police.
Some undercover officers contacted the man wanting to buy a permit.
They met and reportedly the officers paid 300 South African rands ($16; £12) for the processing of the fake permit.
The 22-year-old man was arrested and police raided his house where they found a laptop and other documents.
South Africa is on a nationwide lockdown to stop the spread of coronavirus.
During the lockdown, only essential services that include health workers, financial services providers, journalists and retail workers among others are allowed to continue working.
Businesses that give essential services have been applying for a special permit from the government that allows their members of staff to be outside during lockdown.
- Expanding Africa’s vaccine production capacity key – Noguchi Director
- Dengue fever epidemic declared in Burkina Faso
- Frontiers earned over $87m while government got under $7m from COVID testing at KIA – Report
- I donated PPE worth over $1 million during COVID-19 pandemic – Ken Agyapong
- Ablakwa releases ‘inaccessible details’ of contract awarded to Frontiers for COVID test at the airport
- Read all related articles