Sunday Times

EATING FROM GRAVES

Into the dark heart of cannibal country

- By NATHI OLIFANT

The fact that he could have eaten him just makes me sick to the stomach Ntombifuth­i Sithole Mongezi’s mother

When inyanga Nino Mbatha walked into the Estcourt police station last weekend, officers wondered why he smelt so bad.

“He reeked of something,” an officer told the Sunday Times this week.

The officer, who was an acquaintan­ce of the well-known traditiona­l healer, said policemen were not immediatel­y sure what the smell was as Mbatha walked up to the desk at about 6pm on Friday.

They would find out in grisly fashion. In the bag Mbatha carried were putrid body parts — a piece of a leg and a hand.

“He said he was coming to report that he was tired of being made to eat human flesh and wanted out,” said one of a group of officers close to the investigat­ion.

“He produced these putrid limbs and some colleagues ran off.”

This stomach-churning interactio­n led to the uncovering of a deep, dark secret in the KwaZulu-Natal Midlands town. If police, community members and even the mayor are to be believed, people in Estcourt have been eating human flesh as part of a saga involving body parts for muti.

Five men have been arrested on charges of murder and conspiracy to commit murder, and for the possession of human body parts. The men — Mbatha, Lungisani Magubane, Khayo Lamula, Mgabadeli Masondo and Jobe Sithole — will appear in court tomorrow for a bail applicatio­n.

Police believe that in at least one case the body parts came from a woman who was murdered by the men. The Sunday Times has establishe­d that at least three graves were dug up in June. Two of the desecrated graves are in the town’s Fordervill­e Cemetery, while the other is in a traditiona­l burial site.

When the Sunday Times visited the area this week, it found a community shaken to its core.

When night falls in Estcourt and its surroundin­g rural villages, residents hurry indoors. Only those who work late shifts or who absolutely have to be are on the streets — and they are usually walking hastily to get to the safety of their homes.

“I knock off at 9pm and have to walk 2km to my place. I have asked my boss to change me to a day shift. I’m new in Estcourt and my family is worried about me,” said Sindi Mtolo, who works for a fast-food outlet.

Son’s grave

Estcourt mayor Jabu Mbhele, a resident of Ward 18 in Esigodlwen­i, where Mbatha comes from, said killings and mutilation of bodies were not new in Estcourt, especially in her ward. Mbhele attended a community meeting on Monday, and recounted how families spoke out about missing family members and the discovery of mutilated bodies.

“In that meeting we learnt of horrible and disgusting practices. People told us the suspects had said if, for example, they ate a raw human heart, it will make them brave and fearless,” she said.

Mbhele said she was aware of the three desecrated graves — and fears that similar occurrence­s might show that the cannibalis­m horror is even more widespread than feared.

“I would not say the [five] suspects are linked to this, but around the same time [as the three graves were desecrated] other graves in Wembezi township, including one that belongs to my husband’s relative, were violated,” she said.

For Ntombifuth­i Sithole, who went completely blind in 2007, the arrests reopened painful old wounds.

Her son Mongezi Mkhize was shot dead by his elder brother, Sithole’s oldest child, as he was trying to protect his mother. He was buried in December 2011.

But in June, some five-and-a-half years later, the grave was dug up, police have confirmed. Police sources said Mkhize’s body was removed, mutilated and burnt following his exhumation.

Nothing could have prepared Sithole for the news. “I cried. I asked what it was that God was punishing me for,” she said.

Her pain was aggravated this week when she found out that one of the men arrested for dealing in and eating human flesh was Mkhize’s brother-in-law, Magubane.

“The fact that he could have eaten him just makes me sick to the stomach,” she said.

According to Sazi Jericko Mhlongo, the national deputy president of the Council of Traditiona­l Healers of South Africa, an insatiable obsession to make quick money was fanning the killing of people for body parts.

“This is degrading our profession and the love of money is perpetuati­ng dangerous myths.

“You cannot eat human flesh, that’s taboo. Human flesh cannot heal any diseases,” he said.

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 ?? Picture: Khaya Ngwenya ?? Esigodlwen­i resident Dumisani Ndlovu stands next to Mongezi Mkhize’s desecrated grave.
Picture: Khaya Ngwenya Esigodlwen­i resident Dumisani Ndlovu stands next to Mongezi Mkhize’s desecrated grave.
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