Daily Mail

SPECIAL INVESTIGAT­ION

- By David Jones

POSIng earnestly for her passport photo, this is the only known image of Sheila Seleoane, the solitary spinster whose body lay undiscover­ed for two-and-a-half years after she died in her London flat.

Published here for the first time, it was given to the Mail by her long-lost family in South Africa, who used it to illustrate the order of service at her funeral in her ancestral homeland.

I have spent months investigat­ing the background to this disturbing story, in many ways a parable for the depersonal­isation of life in many parts of urban Britain.

In the coming days, the truth behind the scandal should emerge. On Thursday an inquest will seek to establish how, and when, Miss Seleoane died. It will be followed by publicatio­n of an independen­t report into how her death could have gone unnoticed for such a scandalous length of time.

However, I have already uncovered many fresh elements to this perplexing case.

Among them is the macabre claim, made by a neighbour who lived directly below the dead woman, that footsteps were heard in her fourth-floor flat in Peckham, South London, many months after she had died — supposedly alone and without anyone knowing (or caring) what had become of her.

We will return to this developmen­t. First, however, a poignantly ironic observatio­n.

It is that Miss Seleoane’s distant relatives, who lived 8,000 miles away and never once spoke to her, much less met her — have shown more concern, since learning of her death, than anyone with whom she had contact in Britain.

The list who surely ought to have enquired into her disappeara­nce much earlier includes her colleagues, the police, utilities companies, and certainly the Peabody Trust, the affordable-housing charity from which she rented her flat.

In recent weeks, this British-born medical secretary has been remembered at two funerals. The contrast between them tells us all we need to know.

Just two mourners attended the first, on April 19 at Croydon Crematoriu­m, a few miles from where she was found: her brother Victor, a convicted murderer from whom she was estranged, and a representa­tive of Peabody.

Watching this soulless service via video-link was a sobering reminder of her isolation.

As a pastor gave a superficia­l overview of Miss Seleoane’s 61 years of life (without referring to her disgracefu­l abandonmen­t) the two men sat dutifully on opposite sides of the aisle. When it finished, they shuffled away quickly.

If only the housing trust had honoured the promise it made to residents of Lord’s Court, the block of flats where Miss Seleoane lived, several neighbours would have attended. However, they didn’t know that the funeral had taken place until the Mail informed them.

‘Everybody is disgusted that Peabody didn’t tell us, but I’m glad that she at least had a proper send-off,’ said one.

Peabody responded to the neighbour’s subsequent complaint with a letter stating Miss Seleoane’s ‘ immediate family’ — presumably meaning her furtive brother, her only living relative in Britain — wanted a ‘private’ service.

However, after her body was found I traced her distant relatives in the Eastern Cape, from where her mother Adelina emigrated in 1954 to work as a doctor’s housekeepe­r in London.

Deeply distressed to hear of her abandonmen­t, they were determined to mark her passing with a traditiona­l Methodist ceremony, and burial in the family plot.

To their credit, Peabody did arrange and pay for Miss Seleoane’s remains to be flown to South Africa.

Held last month in a packed chapel whose bare-brick walls echoed to stirring eulogies and the uplifting strains of a gospel choir, it was a magnificen­t occasion that finally brought her the dignity and affection she had been denied.

Some members of her sprawling South African family travelled many miles to be among the 100, or so, mourners led by Miss Seleoane’s sister, Bella Brooms, one of her two surviving siblings.

But now these distant kinfolk are demanding answers.

Since their culture ensures neighbours constantly call in on one another, her fate is beyond their comprehens­ion, and they are at pains to know how it could have happened.

They can’t afford to attend the inquest, due to begin on July 21 at Southwark Coroner’s Court, at the same time as the independen­t report, by housing consultant­s Altair, is expected to be published. However, they will follow proceeding­s as closely as possible.

RESIDENTS of Lord’s Court also want the truth behind this saga.

Their constituen­cy MP Harriet Harman has asked the coroner to allow them to bear witness to their harrowing experience­s at the inquest. One neighbour, who repeatedly reported her suspicions that Miss Seleoane had died, tells me she will certainly give evidence.

To recap, Miss Seleoane is known to have died sometime in the late summer or autumn of 2019. Alarmed by the overpoweri­ng smell that filled the corridors, residents repeatedly raised concerns with Peabody.

Yet her remains were discovered, propped on the sofa and apparently flanked by deflated party balloons (the presence of which is yet another mystery) when, finally, police broke into the flat in February this year.

The Met say they are satisfied there was nothing untoward about her death and that she died naturally — though whether a pathologis­t can pinpoint the precise cause with certainty after such a long period of decomposit­ion remains to be seen.

We must assume the police have good reason to make this assertion. Yet one wonders how it squares with that bombshell footsteps claim from the resident living below.

This person is believed to have said they heard the sounds through the ceiling more than once last winter.

In February, when Miss Seleoane’s balcony windows — which had been closed for more than two years — began to bang open and shut, this same resident raised the alarm.

Police arrived to find her whitepaint­ed door locked from the inside, with a months- old notice warning that gas contractor­s were about to be cut off Sellotaped to it.

FOR reasons unknown, this threat was never carried out. But when the police broke in they found her skeletal remains. So, could someone have accessed the flat by other means during the estimated 30 months that she laid?

A ghoulish intruder, perhaps, who, having entered through the open windows wasn’t repelled by the stench, nor scared off by the sight of a decomposin­g body on the settee.

According to a source living in the building, it is just possible.

‘For at least two months, in September and October, 2021, scaffoldin­g was erected so the outside of the building could be painted, so someone could have climbed up to the fourth floor,’ they told me, speculatin­g that it might have been a prospectiv­e burglar or rough-sleeper.

Adding to the intrigue, the insider says another resident claims to have heard someone climbing the scaffoldin­g in the months before the body was discovered.

Whatever the truth, we can be sure that these suspicions were reported to Peabody, for they were addressed by Pablo Cazar, the trust’s Head of neighbourh­oods — South, in a letter to residents dated April 6.

‘From our visits and conversati­ons, we know many of you have questions, and we are sharing what we can in this letter,’ he wrote.

‘The police have confirmed that Ms Seleoane died of natural causes, and they are not treating her death as suspicious. Although there have been reports from residents that people may have entered Ms Seleoane’s flat in the past two years, the police have decided not to open a criminal investigat­ion on this basis.’ Oddly, we

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 ?? ?? Neglected: Sheila Seleoane (right) and the front door of her flat
Neglected: Sheila Seleoane (right) and the front door of her flat

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