Drive starts to curb initiation deaths
Xasa says ‘don’t relax’ despite marked drop in fatalities
ANEW initiation awareness campaign was launched yesterday by cooperative governance and traditional affairs (Cogta) MEC Fikile Xasa in Mdantsane.
The launch was in preparation for the upcoming winter initiation season in an effort to curb initiate deaths and was attended by various churches leaders and members at the NU10 community hall.
As part of the launch, church leaders conducted a prayer session for the winter season initiation programme for the metro and the province at large.
BCM council speaker Alfred Mtsi said in the metro one death occurred in the last initiation season out of a total of 2 500 initiates who underwent the ritual.
However, Xasa said BCM authorities and community members should not relax as initiate deaths happened anywhere if people “do not care”.
“In the past, the circumcision deaths were associated with AmaMpondo and we were shocked when we saw initiates dying in the Chris Hani District Municipality,” he said.
“Last year a law was passed to protect children and action will be taken if children under the age of 18 years undergo the custom. It is now illegal to do that and there is a punishment for it.”
He said because of “medical reasons”, government encouraged and recommended that initiates undergo circumcision during the winter and not during the summer season. “This has health reasons, but it is not law. We found that in the Chris Hani District Municipality they don’t die in winter as they do in December and that tells us there is something to it and we need to stop it,” Xasa added.
He lambasted iingcibi [traditional surgeons] and amakhankatha [traditional nurses] who called initiates names if they took their medication for various illnesses during the initiation process.
“If you have high blood pressure or other illnesses that you had before circumcision and then decide to leave your pills behind, you will die. We need parents, iingcibi and amakhankatha to see to it that this does not happen,” Xasa said.
He said initiation schools were now used to hide criminals on the run, drugs and stolen property.
He said the metro was trying to curb the criminal element who were ruining the culture.
Chief Whip for traditional leaders in the BCM council, Prince Phakamile Makinana, said it was not true that initiates should not drink water and take medication.
He said they worked closely with the departments of education, social development, health and the police. “The law is very clear that children under the age of 18 years should not be in the initiation schools,” he said. — mamelag@