Sowetan

Family fight to bring dead relative home

Bahamas refuses to release body

-

Diplomats from SA are assisting a Durban family to repatriate the body of a woman who died of illness in The Bahamas. Buhle Bhengu‚ 30‚ from Umlazi, KwaZulu-Natal‚ died a month ago while working on a cruise ship. Authoritie­s there are reluctant to release her body‚ claiming she died of TB. Minister of internatio­nal relations & cooperatio­n Lindiwe Sisulu has received a report from a diplomat in the region‚ Lumka Yengeni‚ “on all circumstan­ces and engagement­s” involving Bhengu’s death‚ the department said in a statement at the weekend.

Yengeni “has been engaging with The Bahamas authoritie­s and other relevant parties to determine a way to meet the request of the family regarding the return of her mortal remains back to SA.” Communicat­ion with the authoritie­s in The Bahamas was ongoing.

Sisulu said she had asked Yengeni “to continue to engage with all relevant authoritie­s to meet the requests of the family‚ noting the constraint­s of the health regulation­s of The Bahamas and all affected countries.”

Buhle’s brother‚ Thobani Bhengu‚ appealed for help in a voice note sent from The Bahamas. “We are determined to fight to bring back her body and make sure that she is

buried and treated the way she deserves. The funeral home [in The Bahamas] wants to cremate her but they won’t alphone,”

low us to see her body. How can we know that [it] is Buhle, the person that we came here for?” he asked.

A petition titled #BringBuhle­Home states the cremation is scheduled for Tuesday March 12.

Njabulo Cele said the SA High Commission in Jamaica has written to the funeral home asking them not to go ahead with the cremation‚ “but still the family members who are in The Bahamas have been told that the scheduled cremation will go ahead”. Cele said yesterday an SA government official was expected to arrive in Nassau-Bahamas‚ “to be with the family members of Nobuhle as they continue to fight for the repatriati­on of her body”.

“...One of the many reasons that they have used in refusal to release the body is that the countries they have relations with will not accept the body to pass through their borders as they suddenly claim that it is infectious [due to the TB diagnosis].

“The South African government has ... since undergone their own negotiatio­ns with countries that have a working relationsh­ip with the country to find a way to have Buhle transporte­d home. We welcome these [interventi­ons] in our quest to see the Bhengu family get the closure they need and deserve.”

Cele said the family had reiterated their opposition to cremation. “We would like to put it on record that the family has not agreed to such and will not agree to such‚ as their priority it to get Buhle back home.” -

 ??  ?? Buhle Bhengu.
Buhle Bhengu.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa