Daily News

Crematoriu­m reopens briefly, giving hope

- ANELISA KUBHEKA

PLANS are afoot to get a new cremator into the Tongaat Crematoriu­m to replace the old one.

This as after some years, the Mobeni Heights Crematoriu­m opened its doors to the public, who previously had to carry the extra cost of using a private crematoriu­m.

Yesterday the facility had already begun cremating bodies.

Maggie Govender, an ANC constituen­cy MPL in Chatsworth, said their office had received many queries from the community about this facility.

"We have in the past raised the matter with the municipali­ty and were told it would be opened in February.

“We have been pushing together with councillor­s in the city and within the Cogta portfolio committee to have this facility operating back to normal.

“Yesterday (Sunday) I confirmed with the deputy city manager for Community and Emergency Services, Dr Musa Gumede, who said the facility was functionin­g on site,” she said.

She said when asked when the facility would be open for use, Gumede told her it was open with three bookings already secured for yesterday.

“As a parliament­ary constituen­cy, I am pleased to give the community some good news on this long-standing issue. There was a great need for this facility to be operationa­l, especially with Covid-19.”

Ntokozo Sibiya, chairperso­n of the city's portfolio committee for Community and Emergency Services, confirmed that the Mobeni Heights Crematoriu­m opened yesterday.

“We were there just before 10am and there was a body being cremated. The fixing of the second crematoriu­m in Mobeni is also in the planning stage, together with the one in Tongaat, which will have a new machine since the one we currently have is old and due for a change.”

Muzi Hlengwa, president of the National Funeral Practition­ers’ Associatio­n of SA, said the organisati­on welcomed “this long-awaited move” to finally have the crematoriu­m opened, adding that he hoped it would be maintained properly and as often as required to avoid “a repeat of history”.

“We are also hoping that there will be no corruption and that the community will be treated with the respect and dignity they deserve going forward.”

Hlengwa applauded the community, media and authoritie­s who put pressure on the city by highlighti­ng the need and urgency to have the facility reopened.

However, when the Daily News visited the facility yesterday afternoon, it learnt that the machine which had been working and cremated bodies in the morning was no longer working.

For years, the facility has been dysfunctio­nal, at one point only operating with one furnace.

In February last year, a new cremator arrived from the US and had cost the city R3.5 million, however by September it had not been installed.

Last week, the city said refurbishm­ent of the facility was completed last year with air emissions testing done in November and an applicatio­n for an air emissions licence from the Department of Economic Developmen­t, Tourism and Environmen­tal Affairs was done in December.

 ?? | MOTSHWARI MOFOKENG African News Agency (ANA) ?? ACCORDING to Ntokozo Sibiya , chairperso­n of the city’s portfolio committee for Community and Emergency Services, the Mobeni Heights Crematoriu­m opened yesterday. She visited the facility where she witnessed a cremation. However, when the Daily News went to the facility in the afternoon it learned that the machine that had been working and cremated bodies in the morning was no longer working.
| MOTSHWARI MOFOKENG African News Agency (ANA) ACCORDING to Ntokozo Sibiya , chairperso­n of the city’s portfolio committee for Community and Emergency Services, the Mobeni Heights Crematoriu­m opened yesterday. She visited the facility where she witnessed a cremation. However, when the Daily News went to the facility in the afternoon it learned that the machine that had been working and cremated bodies in the morning was no longer working.

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