“The second patient who has now tested positive for COV-19 will now be immediately admitted to a public health facility in Gauteng that the government has identified as one of the hospitals that are ready to receive COVID-19 positive patients,” the health ministry said in a statement
The ministry assured the public it had secured information on the location of the other people in the group that had travelled to Italy.
The health ministry also confirmed that a 39-year-old South African man working in Daegu, South Korea, has also tested positive for COVID-19.
Authorities said the man, who was due to return to South Africa, would remain where he was until details of his treatment in South Korea were verified.
The African continent now has more than 30 confirmed cases, including in Egypt, Morocco, Algeria and Tunisia.
South Africa is meanwhile preparing to repatriate 184 of its citizens — comprising students, teachers and other professionals working in China’s Wuhan, the epicentre of the epidemic.
President Cyril Ramaphosa has urged South Africans not to panic but also cautioned about the potential impact of the outbreak on the country’s struggling economy