South Africans Urged To Bury Dead Within Four Days Amid Load Shedding, Heatwave

Loading player...
Monageng Legae – Chairperson of South African Funeral Practitioners Association talks about Unrelenting load shedding coupled with a heatwave across parts of South Africa are causing bodies to decay much faster at funeral parlours, an industry body has warned.

The South African Funeral Practitioners Association’s (SAFPA) national secretary-general Vuyisile Mabindisa urged people to bury their loved ones within four days of their death to ease pressure on funeral parlours, and to ensure that they are buried with minimal decay.

"The industry is seeing a large number of putrefied bodies being buried. Burying one’s kin within four days, or less, is cost-effective and prevents families from seeing their departed ones in a poor state of decomposition," Mabindisa said in a statement on Tuesday.

South Africa experienced over 200 days of load shedding in 2022, while every day of 2023 has seen load shedding, including six days of Stage 6.

Mabindisa said the current heatwave was causing the rate of decomposition to skyrocket. According the SA Weather Service, parts of KwaZulu-Natal, including Pietermaritzburg, are expected to approach a high of nearly 40 degrees Celsius on Tuesday. 

"Take a 45-year-old man with a history of diabetes: the minute he passes, he will start bloating within an hour. So if our refrigerators cannot manage decaying bodies, then we are looking at a disaster," Mabindisa said.

"Load shedding has a ripple effect on the bereaved. Besides seeing their loved ones decay at a rapid rate, they have to endure delays in the death certificate registration process at Home Affairs because of load shedding. This forces families to postpone the burial for a later date."
25 Jan 2023 1PM English South Africa Business News · Investing

Other recent episodes

Kaya Biz: Budget 2026 under the microscope - Part 2

Kaya Biz brings you a comprehensive post-Budget 2026 special, featuring an in-depth, one-on-one conversation with Finance Minister Enoch Godongwana following his address in Cape Town. In what is being described as a notably optimistic fiscal package, Budget 2026 delivers inflation-linked adjustments to personal income tax brackets and medical tax credits…
25 Feb 3PM 51 min

Budget 2026 under the microscope - Part 1

Kaya Biz brings you a comprehensive post-Budget 2026 special, featuring an in-depth, one-on-one conversation with Finance Minister Enoch Godongwana following his address in Cape Town. In what is being described as a notably optimistic fiscal package, Budget 2026 delivers inflation-linked adjustments to personal income tax brackets and medical tax credits…
25 Feb 3PM 22 min

TECH & INNOVATION: Top social media trends to watch in 2026

Social media continues to evolve at lightning speed, reshaping how brands connect with audiences. As we navigate through 2026, the landscape is being defined by emotional storytelling, authentic connections and a strategic balance between human creativity and AI-powered innovation. The numbers paint a compelling picture: South Africa is home to…
24 Feb 3PM 10 min

SAT - Celebrating 20 Years of Connecting Africa to the World

What began as a strategic initiative by South African Tourism has grown into one of the continent’s most influential business events platforms. Meetings Africa was created to position Africa not just as a leisure destination, but as a serious global player in the meetings, incentives, conferences and exhibitions — or…
24 Feb 3PM 21 min

Salaries rise in January ahead of National Budget relief expectations

With the 2026 National Budget looming, South African salary earners are hoping that modest wage growth will finally translate into real financial relief rather than being absorbed by inflation and tax pressures. While recent data shows nominal salary increases, real wages remain under pressure, reflecting the broader tension between economic…
24 Feb 3PM 16 min