The Star Early Edition

GRIM CARGO: Wheels come off trailer carrying corpses

Wheel comes off trailer carrying coffins with 42 corpses for burial

- SIPHUMELEL­E KHUMALO AND LINDILE SIFILE

THE OWNER of the trailer that crashed on the M1 South while carrying 42 corpses for pauper burials claims she was misled by the funeral parlour.

The shocking incident which took place yesterday morning near Newtown brought traffic to a standstill as police, forensic and JMPD officers carried out an investigat­ion at the crash site.

Their work lasted until 5pm when forensic pathology removed the bodies.

The trailer had been carrying 16 adult corpses and 26 stillborn babies from the Charlotte Maxeke Academic Hospital to the Olifantsvl­ei cemetery for paupers’ burials in Eldorado Park when it lost one of its wheels.

One of the passengers, who declined to be named, was a 61-year-old man who said he had been working for the Soweto-based undertaker for three years. There were three passengers in their car.

He said they took all the necessary precaution­s by getting all the documentat­ion from Home Affairs and the municipali­ty. Initially it was thought that he and his co-workers did not have the documents to transport the bodies.

“We almost died and I am still in shock… The trailer’s wheel came off and the car almost capsized to the other side of the bridge. We have done this before but the authoritie­s said we do not have documentat­ion, how could we have possibly stolen bodies from the hospital.”

The furious and emotional driver showed documents and even went on to ask: “Would I be able to steal the bodies from a hospital?”

The father of four said he was even more frustrated because while the scene took place at 9.45am and the graves had already been dug, police arrived four hours later. His own child had been hospitalis­ed with a blood clot in his head.

The owner of the trailer was angry to hear that the funeral parlour had lied to her.

Thandiwe Patience Gaba, who runs her trailer-hire business in Pimville, Soweto, said the parlour had hired the trailer on Tuesday evening.

Gaba was under the impression that he needed it to transport empty coffins.

“I didn’t know he wanted it to carry bodies. He should have been straight with us and asked to use the bigger trailer,” Gaba told The Star yesterday.

She said one of the parlour employees arrived at her house yesterday afternoon looking for replacemen­t tyres and nuts, and did not reveal they had been transporti­ng bodies when the accident happened. It was not the first time she had done business with the parlour.

The JMPD alleged that the driver did not have any documentat­ion to prove that they were a registered mortuary or hospital documents to move the bodies.

Public Safety MMC Michael Sun said the way the bodies were being transporte­d was questionab­le. “The manner in which the bodies were transporte­d was neither dignified nor hygienic. We call upon the provincial Department of Health to conduct a full investigat­ion and also the SAPS to further investigat­e to ensure there was no foul play.”

Dr Medupe Modisane, acting chief executive of the Forensic Medical Services, said it was an unfortunat­e incident and their department was waiting for the SAPS to arrive in order to clear the scene.

He confirmed that the corpses would be taken back to the hospital to be transporte­d and buried properly.

Modisane added that the vehicle would be investigat­ed as it appeared unroadwort­hy.

 ?? PICTURES: ITUMELENG ENGLISH / ANA ?? CRASH SCENE: The trailer with the coffins of 16 adults and 26 stillborns on the M1 highway yesterday. The bodies were being moved from the Charlotte Maxeke Academic Hospital to the Olifantsvl­ei cemetery in Eldorado Park for burial when one of the...
PICTURES: ITUMELENG ENGLISH / ANA CRASH SCENE: The trailer with the coffins of 16 adults and 26 stillborns on the M1 highway yesterday. The bodies were being moved from the Charlotte Maxeke Academic Hospital to the Olifantsvl­ei cemetery in Eldorado Park for burial when one of the...
 ??  ?? SEARCH FOR CLUES: Officials at the scene yesterday afternoon.
SEARCH FOR CLUES: Officials at the scene yesterday afternoon.

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