Slain
27 year old Bafana Bafana captain Senzo Meyiwa was laid to rest in Durban on
Saturday.Thousands of
people braved the rain to pay their last respects. While in excess of 20 000
people packed Durban’s Moses Mabhida stadium, several thousand more lined the
streets of Durban along the route to his final resting place in Heroes Acre in
the Chesterville cemetery.

From early in the morning
mourners began converging on the stadium in a colourful assortment of clothes
and club regalia. Several had driven from Gauteng to attend the service
including Bongani “Mzekebhaka” Tshabalala, who carried a poster calling for
former national police commissioner Bheki Cele to be reinstated.
Tshabalala said: “I
believe… he (Cele) can be given a chance. He’s a man who doesn’t take
nonsense.”This accident tells me Bheki Cele must take over. This crime must
come to an end.” Tshabalala, who is the chairperson of the Orlando Pirates
supporters club in Katlehong, said that since Cele had left office, statistics
showed that crime was on the increase. Meyiwa was shot and killed on Sunday
evening in Vosloorus, Ekurhuleni, while visiting his girlfriend, actress and
singer Kelly Khumalo.Two men entered the house, demanding cellphones, and shot
him before fleeing.
There were several other
mourners who carried posters referring to the country’s violent crime and it
was a topic that a number of the speakers addressed at the funeral service,
Kaizer Chiefs boss Kaizer Motaung urged South Africans to stand up against
crime and report it.
“We must inculcate a
culture where people come forward to report crime. What brought us here is
nothing but crime. If it was not for crime, Senzo would still be in our midst,”
he said. South African Football Association president Danny Jordaan said:
“Somewhere in our society the value of human life is being challenged.”
Minister in the Presidency Jeff Radebe said Meyiwa’s death made it very clear
that the presence of firearms in South African Society needed to be debated.
“A national discourse has
started and it is welcome,” he told mourners, adding that South Africans would
need to decide “whether we are hell-bent on self destruction or peaceful
co-existence”.
Meyiwa’s coffin arrived
at the stadium with a full police honour guard and the country’s flag draped
over it. The list of those who came to pay their respects included Sports
Minister Fikile Mbalula, Bafana Bafana coach Shakes Mashaba and players from
Kaizer Chiefs and Meyiwa’s team Orlando Pirates. The rain failed to dampen the
crowd’s resolve to pay their respects. An announcement over the loudspeaker
system said that some 25 000 people had arrived at Moses Mabhida stadium. After
the service, thousands of supporters left the stands to stand on a ramp and watch
a convoy of white Audi Q7s leave the stadium. One carried Meyiwa’s remains.
As the convoy made its
way out of the city along the Western Freeway people could be seen with their
cell phones taking pictures or crossing their forearms in the Orlando Pirates
salute. The team’s logo is a skull and cross bones. As the coffin descended at
the cemetery, a police bugle performed a rendition of The Last Post.
Meyiwa’s wife wept, and
appeared to be speaking to the slain goalkeeper as she threw a flower into the
grave. Meyiwa’s father Samuel looked lost and forlorn, and seemed to be
confused after being handed the South African flag that was draped over
Meyiwa’s coffin. A heavy rain then began to fall. As relatives approached the
grave, they too began to weep. Kaizer Chiefs players, led by goalkeeper
Itumeleng Khune, placed flowers in the grave. Mbalula stood at the grave with a
bowed head.
Meyiwa’s grave was next
to anti-apartheid journalist Nat Nakasa, who was buried at the cemetery in
September, 49 years after he was buried in New York. On Friday, a man appeared
in court in connection with Meyiwa’s murder. Gauteng police spokesman Brigadier
Neville Malila said: “(On Thursday), after receiving very positive information
about a number of suspects, we conducted an identity parade during which some
of the witnesses positively identified one person.”
The 25-year-old Vosloorus
resident, Zenokuhle Mbatha, was arrested and charged on the basis of the
positive identification.
The National Prosecuting
Authority said Mbatha would appear in the Boksburg Magistrate’s Court again on
November 11.
Culled from Sport24
No comments:
Post a Comment