Cape Times

Army called in as bodies pile up

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MEMBERS of the SA National Defence Force have been dispatched to Gauteng mortuaries to help with the backlog as the strike by assistant pathologis­ts rages on.

DA spokespers­on on health Jack Bloom welcomed the move, and added that at least 200 post-mortems still had to be performed across the province.

“Some have to be performed on bodies that have been in the mortuaries for more than a week.

“I am concerned, however, that police have not been able to provide sufficient protection to doctors to enable them to perform the autopsies,” said Bloom.

Mortuaries in Diepkloof, Hillbrow, Germiston and Roodepoort were seriously affected by the strike action, he said.

The two-week-long strike by workers across mortuaries in Gauteng has delayed the release of post-mortem results and burials as bodies remained stuck at the mortuaries.

The provincial department of health said talks with labour continued in a bid to end the crippling strike.

Forensic pathology assistants downed tools over salaries and working conditions. Protesters gathered outside the Diepkloof facility on Friday. A subsequent meeting with Health MEC Gwen Ramokgopa failed to end the impasse.

Bloom said some grieving families were contemplat­ing legal action against the provincial department.

“The department has also unreasonab­ly refused families to employ private pathologis­ts working with police supervisio­n to do the autopsies, which are done in all cases of suspected unnatural death,” he said.

“This strike has caused incredible anguish to families of the deceased. This includes legal action being contemplat­ed by Muslim families who are religiousl­y required to bury the deceased on the day of death.”

He urged Premier David Makhura to intervene and resolve the strike. – ANA

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