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No
rest for the dead
IRIN News
October 22, 2007
http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=74911
BULAWAYO, (IRIN) - As
Zimbabwe's economic crisis deepens, the daily struggle to make ends
meet often takes priority over providing loved ones with a decent
burial and morgues are being filled beyond capacity.
Mortuaries, plagued by
power failures, failing refrigerators and lack of chemicals to operate
properly, have to keep corpses for extended periods of time while
relatives try to scrape together what they can to bid the deceased
a final farewell. Many relatives never return and, after nine months,
abandoned corpses are given pauper burials by the state.
"The situation is
desperate; we have seen people disappear immediately after a relative
admitted in the hospital dies. This has created serious problems,
as the mortuary here at Mpilo hospital [on the outskirts of Zimbabwe's
second largest city, Bulawayo] cannot cope - bodies are piled on
top of each other," said Ishamael Moyo, who sells cheap wooden
coffins to poor desperate families just outside the mortuary.
"They stay long
without being collected, while some are never collected at all,"
Moyo told IRIN. "The situation is terrible: refrigerators are
always breaking and the mortuaries do not have chemicals to spray
the decomposing bodies." According to the authorities, the
mortuary was designed to hold 60 corpses but now has a daily average
of 250.
Around 200 bodies are
given pauper burials every year. "The number is increasing
due to HIV/AIDS and the economic situation ... most people given
pauper burials would have been admitted at hospitals and when they
die their relatives simply disappear," said a hospital official
at Mpilo, who wished to remain anonymous.
Some bodies had been
unclaimed for so long that they had started decomposing. "We
have bodies that have not been collected for over six months; the
mortuary is overflowing with bodies as we speak," said one
mortuary attendant.
Blessing Chebundo, Chairman
of the Parliamentary Committee on Health and Child Welfare, noted
that "Hospitals are not coping with the huge number of deaths
due to HIV/AIDS and we discovered during a nationwide tour that
corpses are rotting at mortuaries due to overcrowding and for staying
longer periods in mortuaries without being claimed by relatives."
He said the Department
of Social Welfare now lacked the funds to conduct pauper burials
on a regular basis, and that the problem was aggravated because
bodies were being brought to mortuaries and left there while families
tried to raise the cash to pay for funerals.
The spokesperson for
the Bulawayo city council, which is in charge of city cemeteries,
Phathisa Nyathi, said the city was running short of burial space.
The council recently reported that burials were increasing by 20
percent each month.
"The number of deaths
we have registered in the last two years has increased astronomically:
in July this year the number of burials in all our cemeteries was
747, while in August the number of burials was 867 ... in previous
years ... we were having between 50 and 60 burials in a single month,"
Nyathi said.
For the last three weeks
Maureen Phiri, 46, has been shuttling from one funeral parlour to
another comparing costs and policies that might suit her family's
pocket. Her husband, Nhlanhla, 52, is terminally ill with cancer
and the family has exhausted its savings on his medication.
"It pains me that
I am already planning my husband's funeral ... [but] if I just sit
and do nothing we will fail as a family to bury him when he dies,
because of high funeral costs," Phiri said.
She said funeral parlours
in the city charged between Z$20 million and Z$25 million (between
US$40 and US$50 at the parallel market rate of Z$500,000 to US$1)
for a coffin, which was too much for her teacher's salary of only
Z$14 million a month (US$28).
According to the World
Health Organisation, in Zimbabwe life expectancy has plummeted from
62 years in 1990 to 37 years for men and 34 years for women in 2004;
both figures are thought to have dropped even further since then.
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