Another victim of circumcision ritual
18 July 2008, 18:11
Aware of the risks of traditional circumcision, the
family of 18-year old Yongama Boya had him circumcised
in hospital before sending him off to the "bush" to
complete the rest of his initiation ritual.
But even that did not save him.
Last week, his uncle found the boy in a coma in one of
the grass-and-stick shelters at an initiation school in
the Qumbu area of Transkei.
And though he ordered water to be warmed, and tried to
give it to Yongama to drink, his nephew died before his
eyes, without regaining consciousness.
The Mthatha district surgeon who conducted the
post-mortem examination listed the immediate cause of
death as "consistent with hypothermia".
In the section on the official form for "conditions
leading to immediate cause", he wrote: "pulmonary
oedema".
In layman's terms, Yongama had pneumonia, and died of
exposure.
According to death certificate number B7117961 issued
on Friday (July 18) by the department of home affairs,
Yongama died of "unnatural causes".
He was victim number 22 of this year's winter-season
crop of Eastern Cape circumcision deaths: deaths that
occur year after year, despite the strenuous efforts of
provincial health authorities to stop them.
The causes of those deaths are for the most part
roughly evenly split between sepsis, resulting from
infected wounds, and dehydration, thanks to the notion
that initiates should not drink water for an extended
period.
And every year, scores more would-be initiates are
admitted to hospital for treatment for problems arising
from botched circumcisions, that in the worst cases
lead to gangrene and the amputation of the entire
penis.
Yongama was a Grade 11 pupil at Riverside High School
in Mthatha, and, according to his elder brother Mtsasa,
was a good-natured, helpful youth.
"He was a quiet, good boy," Mtsasa said. "He was a
twin, but his twin passed away when they were young,
nine months.
"He was a leader in his group, always attending
church. He used even to help people around the
location, repairing fridges and radios and all that
stuff. He was good."
Yongama turned 18 - the legal minimum age for
traditional circumcision in the Eastern Cape - on May
15.
Mtsasa said that, well aware of the hazards of
traditional circumcision, the family decided Yongama
should be circumcised hygienically and safely in
hospital, by a doctor.
He himself had followed this route, he said.
Yongama's circumcision was accordingly done in
hospital during the Easter school holiday.
On June 21 he joined a group of 23 other Hlubi youths
at an initiation school in the bush in the Ethwa
Location in the Qumbu area.
According to Mtsasa, when the time came for the actual
circumcision ceremony, the traditional surgeon saw that
Yongama had already been circumcised, and declared,
correctly, that he could not re-circumcise him.
Pressured by the leader of the three traditional
nurses, or iikhankatha, at the school, the surgeon said
he risked losing his registration with the provincial
health department if he cut the youth again.
When he persisted in his refusal, the nurse began
beating the surgeon and he ran away.
"Then the ikhankatha said, come here, I'm going to
circumcise him again, and he circumcised him in front
of the other people," Mtsasa said.
After the ceremony, the youths were made to sleep on
bare ground under shelters of sticks and grass, even
though it was rainy and cold, he said.
"We had bought him a blanket so he could be
comfortable," Mtsasa said. "They took away the blanket.
He was beaten and not given water or food, I'm
told."
In the weeks that followed, Yongama's condition
worsened.
When the initiates walked to get food from nearby
homesteads, he collapsed repeatedly; when he asked the
nurses to call his brother, they refused; when he tried
in his weakened state to run away, they caught him and
took him back to the school.
When his uncle, Wadana Boya, finally alerted to the
boy's plight, went to the school last Friday, he found
Yongama, pitifully thin, in a coma.
Yongama died soon after he arrived there.
The nurses, according to Mtsasa, claimed that his
death was caused by witchcraft, but the other boys said
Yongama had been sick for at least a week before his
death.
"This thing has happened there several times," Mtsasa
said. "In 2005, there was a boy who passed away under
the supervision of the same traditional nurse [the one
who circumcised Yongama]."
Mtsasa, who works in Durban, drove down the same
night, and discovered that the nurse had "cheated the
police" by claiming Yongama died of natural
causes.
"After I talked to the police, they changed the docket
to murder," he said.
"They [the nurses] are doing something that's totally
unacceptable. Even the old people from our area, they
are complaining about the same thing."
Mtsasa said the Mthatha district surgeon initially put
"natural causes" in his post-mortem report.
However, after Mtsasa secured the intervention of the
Eastern Cape health department, a second post-mortem
was performed by a Port Elizabeth forensic specialist
on Wednesday and the cause of death changed to
"unnatural".
The investigating officer in the case, Detective
Sergeant Vuyani Mvana of the Sulenkama police station,
confirmed he was investigating a murder docket, and
said statements had already been taken from the
traditional surgeon and from Mtsasa.
The nurses had so far not been "available", but once
their statements had been taken, all the documentation
would go to the directorate of public prosecutions for
a decision.
Mvana said he had been told that some of the boys -
including Yongama - had been forced to sleep in the
open, without blankets, despite the bad weather.
On Friday, the shelters at the school were burned,
marking the completion of the initiation ritual for the
remaining 23 youths, and they assumed the status of
men.
On Saturday, Yongama will be buried at Ethwa.
"I don't know what's going to happen at the funeral,"
Mtsasa said. "We're trying to calm people down: they
want to take revenge. But it's not going to wake him
up.
"All the people around the area, they're crying." -
Sapa
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