Durban - A
seven-year-old boy died and about 60 of his mother’s neighbours have been left
homeless after a lovers’ quarrel led to a blaze at a Durban shack settlement at
the weekend.
Lindokuhle Myeza,
who had returned home from boarding school for the holidays, was burned to
death on Saturday night.
According to
witnesses, a woman had set fire to the shack next to the one Lindokuhle had
been sleeping in after an argument with her boyfriend.
It is believed the
quarrelling couple had since disappeared.
The boy had been
alone for a few minutes while his mother, Sthobile Myeza, 24, was at her
sister’s tuck shop a few metres away.
Thembeka Myeza
said on Sunday that Sthobile and their other sister, who also lives in the
settlement, were chatting at about 9pm.
“We had heard the
couple fighting and thought nothing of it because they fought all the time,”
she said.
Thembeka said they
did not hear or smell the fire as her sisters were leaving, but moments later
they realised the danger.
“Sthobile came
running back, saying she could not get into her house because it was engulfed
in flames.”
Panicking, the
sisters ran back to Sthobile’s shack where other residents, who had escaped
their burning homes, gathered as the fire spread.
She said some
neighbours said Lindokuhle had got out and run away.
As they searched
for him, Thembeka took Sthobile to her house to attend to the minor burns she
had sustained on her legs and hands while trying to get into her burning home.
Their brother,
Mbuso, and the local ward 90 chairman, Thulani Ngcobo, joined the search for
Lindokuhle, but there was no sign of him.
When firefighters
put out the fire about two hours later, Ngcobo found Lindokuhle’s body in
Myeza’s home.
“The mattress was
totally burned and only the steel structure and springs remained. I could see
the child’s ashen outline on it,” he said.
Delivering the
news to Sthobile, Ngcobo said she took it so badly they had to call in trauma
counsellors.
“I can’t imagine
what she is going through when even I am traumatised.”
Thembeka said
Sthobile cried uncontrollably, screaming her son’s name and praying.
Lindokuhle had
just returned from boarding school in Inchanga, west of Durban.
“My heart breaks
for my sister. She was so excited to have her son home that when I sent her to
buy stock for my tuck shop, she took him with her,” said Thembeka.
The fire had
spread so fast that resident Fikiswa Sobhoyisi only came away with the clothes
on her back.
Another resident,
Zethu Mditshwa, had only her pyjamas.
“I was sleeping
when a passerby banged on my door shouting for me to get out because of the
fire,” she said.
Mditshwa said she
was crushed when Lindokuhle’s body was discovered.
He and her
six-year-old son had been friends and had played together.
She said she clung
onto her own four children, aged 10, 9, 6 and a 6-month-old, and could do
nothing but watch as the fire destroyed everything they had.
Residents were
shovelling up the rubble on Sunday as smoke still rose in some spots.
They were given
bread and soup, and a tent had been erected to temporarily house them.
Pastor Bheki
Khawula, of the nearby Mega Church International, said the church would donate
food, clothing and blankets to the displaced people in the area.
Ngcobo believes
the sea breeze had helped spread the fire up the hill on which the homes, made
mainly of wood and asbestos, had stood.
Tyres used as a
retaining wall, separating the different tiers on which the homes were built,
were burned through.
“The pathways here
are very narrow. Firefighters have to park far out on the road and sometimes
use extensions for their hoses to get into the settlement,” Ngcobo said.
“While they are
doing all that, the fire spreads.”
He praised
firefighters for their quick response, which he believes saved the rest of the
settlement.
Ngcobo called on
the government to speed up the provision of housing to eradicate informal
settlements and prevent further tragedies.
Officials from
mayor James Nxumalo’s office were also at the scene on Sunday, but would not be
drawn on what aid the city would provide.
They directed the
Daily News to city spokesman, Thabo Mofokeng, who did not respond to calls or
text messages by the time of publication.
Police spokesman,
Captain Thulani Zwane, said a case of arson was being investigated but no
arrests had been made.
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