Saturday Star

R300 000 needed to repatriate SA teacher’s remains from China

- GOITSEMANG TLHABYE goitsemang.tlhabye@inl.co.za

THE government has been urged to work with foreign countries to put co-operative measures in place to handle the repatriati­on of South Africans who die abroad.

This week, yet another family came out to say it was asking for help to bring the mortal remains of their loved one home – Siphosethu Mqokozo. The family need R300 000 to repatriate her remains after she died in China last week.

The family of the 30-year-old South African teacher has, following her death on September 22, started a Backabuddy campaign to raise funds to repatriate her remains.

Mqokozo, originally from Vaalbank in the Eastern Cape, took up an English teaching post in the city of Yangzhou in Jiangsu province of China in 2019.

The family said she left the country in October 2019, and even though they had not been able to see her since, they had been able to use various platforms to continue communicat­ing with her.

Mqokozo had a panic attack and allegedly died on the way to hospital in China.

The family indicated, following her death, that they had spoken to the South African embassy and were in talks with her previous employer to check if there was any assistance they could provide.

They were later informed that she did not have insurance to repatriate her body, but only had health insurance to go to the hospital.

“We would like to bid farewell to the selfless and resilient mother, daughter, sister and friend, and to see her face one last time before laying her to rest. We cannot mourn or give her rest as we are trying endlessly to contact the relevant people to assist in bringing her back and to raise funds for her burial,” wrote the family on the fund-raising page.

“She went to China for the sole purpose of providing for her family, and she was doing so until her passing. She passed away in an unfamiliar place, far away from home. We have tried all avenues of bringing her back; this is our last resort. This is our last hope in ensuring she comes back to us.”

In response to the incident, the Department of Internatio­nal Relations and Co-operation said it was important for South Africans travelling or living abroad to register with the local embassy.

Department­al spokespers­on Clayson Monyela advised citizens to take out travel insurance when going overseas, as he stressed that it was not the department’s duty to repatriate South Africans who died abroad.

Monyela said the reason they encouraged this was that it was in accordance with consular service policy.

Christophe­r Afoke Isike, a professor of African Politics and Internatio­nal Relations in the Department of Political Sciences at the University of Pretoria, said the incident involving Mqokozo was the third time he had heard of something like this.

Isike said, despite not having all the details, he believed that for recourse, the South African consular office in China should be paying for these kinds of costs as that was what they were there for.

“If there are too many South Africans in China, which I doubt but is a possibilit­y, then they should be encouraged to form SA citizens’ associatio­ns, which can help support members in cases like this. Insurance can also help if China recognises those.”

Overall, however, Isike said it was important for the South African government to seriously engage the Chinese government about how its citizens were perceived and treated in China, as the last two who died did so under questionab­le circumstan­ces.

“If that’s the case with this one too, then it doesn’t bode well even for China, as South Africans will become more dissuaded from the adventure of travelling abroad for greener pastures, and this may not necessaril­y be a good thing for South Africa and countries like China.

“So it’s in the best interest of all parties to sit down on this and put co-operative measures in place to handle cases from a preventive point of view,” he said.

 ?? ?? SIPHOSETHU Mqokozo died in China last week.
SIPHOSETHU Mqokozo died in China last week.

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