We are permanently
under pressure from ritualists who demand human parts
– Chief mortuary
attendant, Bamenda regional hospital
Interview
by Michael Ndi in Bamenda
Tamia Sufor |
Can we know a bit about
you?
I
am Tamia Sufor Gabriel, born some 55 years ago in Nkwen, Bamenda III
Sub-division. I was trained on the job as a mortuary attendant since the early
90s and after working for some time here in the Bamenda regional hospital, I
was promoted to the position of chief mortuary attendant with three attendants
working with me. I am happily married with seven children.
How are your wife and
children treating you given that you work in a place most people dread to work?
My
wife treats me like her husband and my children as their father. In fact, all
of them love me and so they are not afraid of me at all.
Why do mortuary
attendants always knock at the mortuary door before entering?
If
some do that, I am different. I am a Christian and what I do is that I pray
very early in the morning before going to my job site. Why should I even knock
the door? Who will open the door for me to enter when everybody in the mortuary
is a corpse? Don’t forget that here, I deal with dead people as you see them
lying in these chambers or fridges.
Now, can you tell us
your daily routine?
I
come to work early in the morning and if any corpse arrives, I receive it and
put in the fridge after some money must have been paid and receipt issued to
the owner of the corpse. A note is equally attached to the corpse for easy
identification. Besides, I wash the corpse when it’s about to be taken out for
burial.
How do you wash and
dress a corpse given that the body is already very stiff?
I
use some special techniques which I need not tell you except you want to learn
the job.
What is the nature of
corpses you receive here?
Some
are accident cases; some beyond recognition and others are abortion and suicide
cases. And in cases of corpses that cannot be recognized, we report to the
state counsel who gives orders where they should be laid to rest.
At one time, a corpse
disappeared from this mortuary. What happened?
Good
question. That was precisely in 2006 and it happened because by then, we were
not numbering corpses preserved here. You know because the fridges are not
enough here, we used to double the corpses in the chambers. And you know we
have three fridges each which take 18 chambers. So that explains why a corpse
that was destined for Meta in Momo division was carted to Bafut in Mezam
division and buried. In the end, the corpse was exhumed and taken to Meta for
befitting burial. I think such a mistake will never repeat itself because all
corpses preserved here now are numbered and the corpse owners are given
tickets.
How long can a corpse
be preserved here?
Those
we embalm can stay for a long time but unembalmed corpses are not allowed here
for more than two days.
With the Ebola, cholera
and other contagious diseases scare, how do you handle corpses here?
This
time, we make sure that any corpse brought here for preservation must be
disinfected together with the vehicle and those who brought the corpse.
Besides, workers of this mortuary use globes and masks when handling corpses.
This is thanks to the new director of the hospital, Dr. Kinge Thompson Njie who
has not only introduced the disinfection and masks systems but has equally
renovated the mortuary chapel and mortuary gate including special financial
motivation to us.
Permit us ask this
particular question. Has anybody ever accosted you demanding for human parts
for rituals?
Of
course! Ritualists at times come to us pleading for things like that which to
me is embarrassing. In fact, we are permanently under pressure from ritualists
who demand human parts. But politely, we advise them to leave before we call
the attention of the police. I believe this is why I was given an award early
this month.
What other difficulties
are you facing as a mortuary attendant?
Some
people who did not preserve their corpses here plead with us to help them
acquire death certificates by indicating that they preserved their corpses
here. Besides, we pray that more fridges be installed here to keep more
corpses. You know we receive at least 30 corpses weekly.
With the number of corpses you receive
weekly here, does it mean that a lot of people are dying in Bamenda and North
West region?
The
number was high before now. You know this time we have mortuaries in Akum,
Bafut, Bali, Shisong hospital and Nkambe general hospital. Before, this was the
lone mortuary in the region.
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