Heartbroken siblings were just about to bury their dead sister

Bones vanish somewhere between police and EC funeral parlour

An Eastern Cape funeral parlour is at the centre of controversy.
An Eastern Cape funeral parlour is at the centre of controversy.
Image: Stock picture

A distraught Eastern Cape family who was told the skeletal remains of their dead sister had gone missing from a funeral parlour is threatening to take the police to court unless her bones are returned to them.

Zikhona Ncume's bones and clothes were  found inside dongas about an hour's walk from her home in Spezini village in Lusikisiki in May 2012.

She had gone missing in December 2011 and the family initially thought she had gone somewhere to enjoy the festive season. But after months of searching, her bones and skull were found in the veld by a group of boys.

Nkume's older sister Phumza Kaluvasi told DispatchLIVE this week her body was taken to Sicelithemba Funeral Services in Lusikisiki by police and state forensic pathology services officials.

A month later they learnt her body had vanished from the funeral parlour.

“What is worse is that were preparing to bury her remains but two days before the funeral, they [police] came to tell us to stop everything,” she said.

“They said two family members would have to provide blood samples that would be matched to her bones to see if it was really her who had been found. After that we heard nothing so we decided to go there ourselves to check. Then we were told the bones had disappeared and no one knew what had happened to them.”

She said though only her bones were found, they had positively identified them through the clothes that were found on the skeleton. These were the same she had been wearing when she disappeared.

“We are hurt that our own government can do this to us. What we want is her bones to be returned to us.”

Kaluvasi said had her bones not been recovered,  they possibly would have been able to make peace with losing their loved one.

She said an officer at Lusikisiki police station had told her earlier this month to “just give up on the matter and just have a prayer to close the chapter”. The police  did not even have the case on their files, she said.

She said when she visited Sicelithemba Funeral Services this year, she was told their computer systems  died a long time ago.

Sicelithemba manager  Goodman Mthotywa reacted with shock on Monday,  saying no one had approached them about missing bones or a missing body. He also said they did not have records dating back to 2012 as they did not keep them for long.

"What I can tell you is that no bone or body has ever gone missing from us. Where is the proof that Sicelithemba was given any bones? We would never lose a body or bones because our reputation as a business is built on us being able not to lose any remains given to us. They should produce something that clearly shows we got that body."

Provincial police spokesperson colonel Sibongile Soci said efforts by the investigating officer who had taken over the case had not yet yielded any fruitful results.

According to the officer, police records indicated that the remains had been taken by the parlour and were never returned.

Contrary to Kaluvasi's version that police had not bothered to tell them anything without being asked, Soci said the family had always been kept abreast of developments to finalise the investigation.

“It is imperative to note that this is a 2012 matter and therefore there will be no quick solution to solve it and unrealistic deadlines will not assist the investigation in any way,” she said.

 

Nkume's brother, Xolisile Wela,  said they were prepared to  take the police to court if it would help to get the “missing bones found again”.

“Instead of giving us answers, they told us in no uncertain terms that we would never find those bones. How do you just lose them, just like that? We will sue them if they don't give them back to us.”

He said they were heartbroken.

DispatchLIVE

 


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