Sowetan

Trampling on the dead

Corpses on highway fiasco blamed on contractor’s greed Rights group laments apartheid-style treatment of paupers

- By Isaac Mahlangu and Tankiso Makhetha

The 42 corpses that brought a busy Johannesbu­rg highway to a standstill after a trailer they were transporte­d in lost its load were destined for mass graves.

Sowetan has establishe­d that one grave, in the paupers section of the Olifantsvl­ei cemetery near Eldorado Park, was ready to bury at least four adult corpses per grave.

The corpses were transporte­d in an open trailer that broke down on the M1 South highway between Braamfonte­in and Newtown on Wednesday leading to a temporary closure of the highway.

Sthembiso Nkosi, one of the grave diggers at the cemetery, told Sowetan: “We bury up to 20 stillborn corpses in one grave because families do not come back to demand exhumation­s.”

He added: “But we can burry up to four adults in one grave.”

When Sowetan visited the cemetery yesterday huge heaps of sand lay next to a row of 12 graves that had been dug up in preparatio­n for the 42 corpses that were returned to Charlotte Maxeke Johannesbu­rg Academic Hospital in Parktown.

Aaron Mabuza, the owner of Soweto Funeral Services which was tasked with burying the corpses, refused to speak to Sowetan, saying: “Aningiyeke­ni nina bantu bamaphepha. [Leave me alone, you media people].”

Earlier Mabuza admitted to Sowetan’s online sister publicatio­n TimesLive that he was at fault for using an open trailer to transport bodies.

Mabuza used a minibus and a rented trailer to transport the 42 coffins.

One of his six temporary workers told TimesLIVE that it was his first time on the job.

The workers take body bags from the hospital mortuary fridges and place them in provided coffins‚ Mabuza confirmed.

Corlett Letlojane, executive director at Human Rights Institute of South Africa, said mass graves were an unfortunat­e stark reminder of what used to happen during apartheid.

“The fact that the bodies were unidentifi­ed or unclaimed does not reduce their humanity. They still deserved to be respected even when they’re dead,” she said.

Sowetan has also establishe­d that Mabuza scored a R46 000 deal with the provincial health department for the transporta­tion and burial of the bodies.

According to documents, the funeral parlour was awarded a contract to conduct 43 pauper burials, at R1 197 per adult corpse and R513 for a child under six years.

The deal amounted to a total of R46 011 54 which included R5 70 for the transporta­tion of corpses and R1 679.22 for grave fees.

Mabuza was slammed for transporti­ng the corpses in a flat-bed open trailer that is used to tow vehicles.

Thabo Banda, the chairperso­n of the Gauteng Funeral Practition­ers Associatio­n, said yesterday that Mabuza was not their member, but lamented the price that the Gauteng health department paid for pauper burials as the main reason behind the “cutting of corners”.

“The person [Mabuza] was trying to cut costs because the R1 197 the department pays is very little considerin­g the costs associated with burials,” Banda said.

“He was simply trying to stretch the rand,” he added.

Gauteng health MEC Gwen Ramokgopa apologised, saying she has instructed that the burial process be stalled for another seven days to give an opportunit­y to families who might still want to come and identify their loved ones.

“Even in instances where we cannot trace the family members of the deceased patients, the law still requires that we bury them in a dignified and respectful manner.

“I have also looked at regulation­s from the hospital on the transporta­tion of bodies and I found that there are no clear specificat­ions.”

‘‘ He was trying to cut costs, the R1 197 the state pays is very little

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 ?? / THULANI MBELE ?? The Olifantsvl­ei Cemetery in Johannesbu­rg where 42 bodies from Charlotte Maxeke Hospital that fell on the highway were meant to be given paupers’ burial.
/ THULANI MBELE The Olifantsvl­ei Cemetery in Johannesbu­rg where 42 bodies from Charlotte Maxeke Hospital that fell on the highway were meant to be given paupers’ burial.

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