Malaria infections are rising sharply in Gauteng, with health authorities confirming a significant increase in both cases and deaths in early 2026. The Gauteng Department of Health has recorded 414 cases and 11 deaths between January and March, already surpassing fatalities reported for the entire 2025 year. The spike affects residents across the province, particularly those who travelled to malaria-endemic regions during the festive period. Officials warn that delayed diagnosis continues to drive fatalities, making early detection critical.

Gauteng residents will face scheduled power outages this week as Eskom implements load reduction across multiple areas from 20 to 26 April 2026. The outages will affect specific suburbs during morning and evening peak periods, with communities rotated through block-based schedules. Unlike national load shedding, load reduction targets high-demand areas to prevent network overload. For households and businesses, this means continued disruption during critical hours of the day.

The schedule outlines outages between 05h00 and 09h00, and again from 17h00 to 22h00, depending on the assigned block and day.

South Africans are unlikely to see diesel prices hit R40 per litre in May, but another sharp increase remains likely based on current data. Early figures from the Central Energy Fund (CEF) show significant under-recoveries for diesel, although more recent trends suggest a lower increase than initially expected. The outlook is critical for Gauteng motorists and businesses already dealing with rising transport costs following April’s record fuel price hikes.

G20

Sharpeville is reshaping its identity in colour. A township long defined by the painful memory of the 1960 massacre is now stepping into a new era of pride, creativity, and self-determination. The newly completed Sharpeville Reservoir Mural has emerged as a landmark piece of public art that signals renewal. It reflects a community rewriting its narrative during a year that placed global attention on Gauteng through the G20.