Sunday World (South Africa)

Out of order crematoriu­m is of grave concern

Ekurhuleni running out of burial space

- By Jo-mangaliso Mdhlela

As the crisis for burial space in cemeteries worsens with reported shrinking space for burial sites in cities and towns as the Covid-19 pandemic is showing no respite, residents of Ekurhuleni face another problem of gigantic proportion – the unavailabi­lity of crematoriu­ms.

Business developmen­t manager Lucky Radebe of the B3 funeral parlour in Benoni, Ekurhuleni, decried the fact that it was taking the City of Ekurhuleni “like forever” to fix the crematoriu­ms.

Radebe said the Lala Ngoxolo crematoriu­m in Crystal Park, Benoni, was in a state of disrepair, with inferior and ageing cremators dating back to more than 50 years, being poorly serviced and unable to function optimally. Radebe told Sunday World this week that the provision of cremation service was often interrupte­d “because of poor maintenanc­e, which is a sad reality that affects our bereaved clients who demand this service as regularly as possible as part of a call to carry out the wishes of the dead”.

He added that there was a growing number of African people who demanded cremation, and the myth that this was a white or Indian culture had to be refuted.

“The failure by the municipali­ty to provide first-rate cremation facilities to meet the growing demands of our communitie­s is shameful and a blot to the wishes of the dead.”

He said it boggled the mind that it was taking so long for the council to seriously attend to this “persistent problem”. “Do our local government leaders think this did not matter? If so, I suggest they are not in touch with needs of the communitie­s they are expected to serve.”

Referring to a crematoriu­m in Crystal Park, Radebe said: “As we understand it, the council is in this mess because the person who got the tender to fix the crematoriu­ms did not do justice to the work because he had no knowledge, or engineerin­g expertise of how crematoriu­ms work, and the incorrect material he used to fix the problem worsened the situation.

“We have to travel to far-away places such as Krugersdor­p, and at exorbitant cost, which we as undertaker­s have to carry because we can’t in good conscience pass it on to our heavily burdened bereaved clients.”

DA councillor for ward 25 Pieter Henning said: “Once again the City of Ekurhuleni has let the residents down by failing to repair the crematoriu­m at Lala Ngoxolo cemetery despite committing to do so on numerous occasions.

“The department of parks and cemeteries closed the facility in 2019 due to the crematoriu­m being in a state of disrepair, and this has caused a great deal of inconvenie­nce to various communitie­s and undertaker­s.”

By Friday afternoon, Ekurhuleni spokespers­on Zweli Dlamini had not responded to Sunday World’s questions regarding the failure to repair crematoriu­ms. He said: “We are still awaiting feedback from the relevant department.”

An Anglican priest in Daveyton, the Rev Edward Sithole, said: “We always have to be guided by the wishes of the dead. If they want cremation, we have to provide it. It is dishearten­ing that some who die cannot have their wishes respected because of the poor services provided by the council.”

 ?? ?? Shortage of burial space in Ekurhuleni has been aggravated by the city’s failure to repair the Lala Ngoxolo crematoriu­m in Crystal Park, Benoni.
Shortage of burial space in Ekurhuleni has been aggravated by the city’s failure to repair the Lala Ngoxolo crematoriu­m in Crystal Park, Benoni.

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