Daily Dispatch

Funeral parlours struggle with high death toll

Deaths, close to triple the number buried last June, eased slightly in July but still way more than double

-

Behind Monageng Legae’s funeral parlour in Soweto sits a refrigerat­ed shipping container made to store chilled goods. Now it stores bodies.

Funeral businesses such as Legae’s Sopema Funerals have taken such measures to cope with the influx of bodies into their morgues as the number of SA’s coronaviru­s cases rise above 500,000, with deaths at about 9,000.

Surrounded by coffins in his showroom and wearing a protective mask and visor, Legae said he handled 85 funerals in June and 75 in July, compared with 30 a month this time in 2019.

The cost of the container, along with outlays on a temporary outdoor waiting area, more staff and an additional night shift, has helped wipe out additional revenues.

Legae said the government should do more for underpress­ure funeral parlours. “People forget that this industry is actually playing a pivotal role.”

Funeral directors say that beyond the spike in deaths from Covid-19, they have to cope with coffin shortages and delays in the issuance of death certificat­es.

Data showed in July that SA had 59% more deaths than would normally be expected between early May and midJuly.

Amid the scramble, funeral parlours aren’t always able to balance strict regulation­s with the expected sensitivit­y: there have been reports in local media, including the Daily Dispatch, of the wrong bodies being interred.

Stephen Fonseca, regional forensics adviser for Africa at the Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross, said SA’s experience should serve as a warning for other nations as the continent’s cases near one million.

“Once a country is facing a

Covid-19 surge, it is too late to plan for how to manage mass casualties in a way that is both safe for the body handlers and dignified for the families of the deceased,” he said.

Even Avbob, the country’s biggest funeral provider by market share, and which was establishe­d during the 1918 Spanish influenza pandemic, has had to make changes to cope with Covid-19.

It has buried about 25% of the country’s coronaviru­s dead and saw a 60% rise in burials in July, GM Pieter van der Westhuizen said, adding that Avbob had set up 13 mortuaries in shipping containers and was building four more.

“If we hadn’t we might have run into trouble,” he said.

Monageng Legae says he handled 85 funerals in June and 75 in July

 ??  ??
 ?? Picture: MARCO LONGARI / AFP ?? UNDER PRESSURE: n owner of a Funeral Parlour adjusts Venetian blinds, inside the showroom where coffins are on display in Port Elizabeth on July 11, 2020. - "People were not taking this seriously" said the owner of the family-run business, as numbers in South Africa of COVID-19 related deaths soars.
Picture: MARCO LONGARI / AFP UNDER PRESSURE: n owner of a Funeral Parlour adjusts Venetian blinds, inside the showroom where coffins are on display in Port Elizabeth on July 11, 2020. - "People were not taking this seriously" said the owner of the family-run business, as numbers in South Africa of COVID-19 related deaths soars.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa