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Unnamed, unclaimed – while families wait for their return

Families spend years hoping their loved ones will come home, but the truth lies in a pauper’s grave

- Sarah Wild This is the final story in a three-part series, made possible by a grant from the Taco Kuiper Investigat­ive Journalism Fund, run by Wits Journalism

Forty unclaimed bodies are to be buried in Doornkop cemetery in Soweto on this particular Tuesday morning. An undertaker confers with an official as they cross names and numbers off a list. Two men lean against bright yellow earthmover­s, waiting for their cue in this burial scene.

People going to work walk through the gaping holes in the cemetery’s cement fencing and across the green grass. In the distance mourners stand around a child’s grave. A family, en route to their mother’s grave, stops to ask whether their friend’s sister is being buried among the unclaimed.

The sister went into Jabulani Hospital a few months ago, they say, but when their friend went to see her, their friend was told she was not there. They are still looking for her but they think she is dead. The sister is not among the seven adults and 30 babies being buried in Doornkop this time.

Small chipboard coffins for the babies, slightly larger than shoe boxes, are passed down to a man standing in an adult-sized grave. He stands on the first layer of coffins so that he can better reach the next one. They are not faring well in the warming sun and putrescent fluid has begun to seep through the coffins.

Not all the lids of the adults’ coffins are closed. Some of the bodies are contorted. One coffin has the rather gruesome appearance of its inhabitant trying to escape. They froze in strange positions in the fridges, the undertaker says.

These bodies are identified but unclaimed. Authoritie­s know who the people are but no family has collected the bodies for burial.

Azwidowi Nevondo, a forensic officer at Hillbrow’s medico-legal laboratory, often has to help families who come to the facility looking for a loved one. She clenches her fists when she talks: “People of South Africa, please, wherever you go, let one of the family know where you are. Don’t just disappear … It’s not only people from outside the country who are not identified, it’s also South Africans.”

When she asks when they last saw their loved one, it can be three months, five months, a year. “And you only come now looking for a missing person?”

It is a common story, heard from multiple people in this sprawling system. Sometimes families only realise that someone is missing when the maintenanc­e payments stop or after months of no contact.

Nevondo shakes her head. “They cannot just sit and relax and think maybe you’re still alive somewhere, whereas maybe you’ve been dead a long time and the government had to bury you as a pauper.”

Shivani Reddy had thought her son was still alive. Yes, she hadn’t heard from him in a while but that was his way. She had begun to worry when, after a few months, no one in the family knew where he was. His cellphone went straight to voicemail.

Her son, Marcel Govender, had fallen through the cracks in the system. On December 5 2012, a cleaner had found his body in a hotel room in Kuilsriver in the Western Cape. The police had written it off as an accidental drug overdose and, although they knew who he was, he was buried as a pauper. They destroyed his property — passport, ID document, clothes — after five months.

More than two years later, on February 16 2015, Reddy discovered that her son had died. Following the prolonged and worrying silence, she set up her own investigat­ion, and asked the department of home affairs to look up his ID number. It listed him as deceased.

Interviewe­d in November last year, Reddy said: “My question is: Why?”

“I’m not talking about foreign nationals, I’m talking about South Africans. We all have IDs ... my child was registered. They had his passport, they had his ID. It would have been a different case if he hadn’t had an ID, and even if he was fingerprin­ted and they didn’t know who this person is, then I could understand.

“But they just found the body, sent it to the mortuary and closed the case unofficial­ly.”

This does not sound like a singular occurrence. In September last year, Major General Charles Johnson, acting divisional commission­er for the detective service, sent out a directive about the “numerous” complaints about unidentifi­ed bodies not being investigat­ed. He sent out the steps that every investigat­ing officer has to follow before they declare someone unidentifi­ed or unclaimed.

But that is no comfort to Reddy. It would cost her R13 500 to have Marcel exhumed, something their religion, Hinduism, demands. “We believe the spirit is still roaming

around,” she said.

“I want justice for my child. I want a proper burial. I want his body exhumed.”

This is unlikely to happen. On December 28 last year, Reddy suffered cardiac arrest and died. Her family says they do not have immediate plans to exhume Marcel.

All officials in Gauteng say that, if a family comes forward after a pauper’s burial, they will be able to find the body of their loved one. Every body has a lot number, the official line goes, and this informatio­n is easily accessible. No one in the forensic system or police service seems to doubt that a body can be exhumed at will. But simply watching one of the regular mass burials suggests that this is not universall­y true.

In Ekurhuleni’s Elandsfont­ein cemetery, it is: small metal plaques testify to the people buried in that grave, a white number on a black background. They dot the green field like flowers.

But i n the potter’s field at Doornkop cemetery, the only indication of graves are the depression­s in the ground, where the soil has settled after the rains. There are no markers identifyin­g any of the dozens of craters that pock the ground.

When asked who is responsibl­e for erecting markers, the undertaker says the Johannesbu­rg City Parks official, but the official points to the undertaker.

“Grave number one starts there,” says Jafta Thusi, the cemetery official who oversees the burial. He points to a depression just in front of a row of pine trees that separates the new potter’s field from the rest of the cemetery. It has been accepting unidentifi­ed and unclaimed bodies since July 2016.

“This is a new place, so no one has come to exhume bodies,” he says. “Maybe next year.”

But exhuming a body is not a simple process — the family first has to find the location of the body, prove to a magistrate that they are related to the person and pay for the exhumation.

And authoritie­s do not release bodies to families lightly.

Professor Jeanine Vellema, chief specialist for South Gauteng’s medico-legal laboratori­es, grimaces and shakes her head when the subject comes up. “You should hear the stories that people come up with to get their hands on bodies.”

She relates the story of someone trying to claim the body of a burn

victim, their body charred beyond recognitio­n. She raises her forearms, mimicking a burned corpse. “‘My cousin always used to raise his arms like that,’ they say.” But that’s called the “pugilist stance”, which commonly happens as the muscles in the arms stiffen and shorten in response to extreme heat.

Sometimes criminals recycle bodies through mortuaries, giving unidentifi­ed bodies names against which they have taken out life insurance policies.

Using bodies for life insurance fraud is a lucrative endeavour. Garth de Klerk, chief executive officer of the South African Insurance Crime Bureau, says this is “rife” in the industry.

“Unfortunat­ely, we are not in a position to quote statistics and for obvious reasons we do not give out the details around the modus operandi that are used in these frauds,” he says.

Burying bodies is also big business but no one is able to quantify just

how big.

It had been difficult to find a pauper’s burial to attend. Employees at the Hillbrow medico-legal laboratory have no advanced warning of when an undertaker will arrive to collect the unidentifi­ed and unclaimed bodies that fill their fridges. Burying the unclaimed and unidentifi­ed is a municipal function and thus out of their control.

The City of Johannesbu­rg’s tender for the service has been out for months. No one is able to say who held it before and ultimately officials stopped responding to inquiries. It appears that burial contracts are currently awarded on a monthly basis.

It costs the municipali­ty R1 500 to bury an unidentifi­ed or unclaimed body and R3 000 for a pauper.

But these costs are not included as a line item in any budget. The Gauteng provincial government pointed to the provincial department of health, which did not respond to

questions. The City of Johannesbu­rg, in its 2012/2013 and 2013/2014 annual reports, lists the number of pauper and indigent burials it performed: both saw exactly 628 people (201 paupers and 427 indigent people) buried, suspicious­ly similar numbers.

A back-of-envelope calculatio­n puts this cost at between R1-million and R2-million, although it could be more.

Tshwane’s annual reports do not have details of the number of indigent and pauper burials. Ekhuruleni in November put out a tender call for this service but, again, there is no informatio­n about who previously held the contract.

Back at Doornkop, this is the first time that undertaker Today’s Hope, based in Braamfonte­in, has buried unclaimed bodies. The bodies of the seven adults and 30 babies arrive in a white minibus, which trundles over the unpaved road.

Mthupi Mahamad, one of the company’s directors, is the only person

in full protective gear. One woman wears a nose-and-mouth mask. Everyone is wearing gloves.

With rope and some difficulty, they lower the large coffins into the ground. The pits are 1.8m deep, the standard depth for burying a body, although perhaps not three bodies.

Today’s 37 burials take about 90 minutes — two graves filled with three adults each, one with 20 babies, and one with an adult and 10 babies.

The earthmover covers the open holes with mounds of waiting soil. The cast of people — relieved undertaker staff, City Parks officials, gawkers — disbands and silence falls.

Sixteen empty pits sit in the shadow of the pine trees waiting for the next load of unclaimed or unidentifi­ed bodies.

 ?? Photos: Kristen van Schie ?? Gone: After a few months Shivani Reddy (above) began to worry about her son’s silence. His body was found with his ID, but no one contacted her and he was given a pauper’s burial. Forensic officer Azwidowi Nevondo (below), to whom families turn, despairs about them not reporting a missing person.
Photos: Kristen van Schie Gone: After a few months Shivani Reddy (above) began to worry about her son’s silence. His body was found with his ID, but no one contacted her and he was given a pauper’s burial. Forensic officer Azwidowi Nevondo (below), to whom families turn, despairs about them not reporting a missing person.
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 ?? Photos: Kristen van Schie ?? Potter’s field: The undertaker’s employees, whose protective clothing is minimal, bury the coffins of seven adults and 30 babies in three graves in Doornkop cemetery in Dobsonvill­e, Soweto. The city official has ticked their names off on a list.
Photos: Kristen van Schie Potter’s field: The undertaker’s employees, whose protective clothing is minimal, bury the coffins of seven adults and 30 babies in three graves in Doornkop cemetery in Dobsonvill­e, Soweto. The city official has ticked their names off on a list.
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