Voltaire — To learn who rules over you, simply find out who you are not allowed to criticize
Tuesday, July 26, 2011
Don't fall asleep in South Africa
An unconscious South African man, presumed dead by relatives, had a rude awakening when he came to his senses in a morgue, officials said. His cries for help terrified employees at the mortuary in the Eastern Cape province of Libode. "Two workers heard screaming from the refrigerators," Sizwe Kupelo, a spokesperson for the Eastern Cape Health Department, said. "They thought it was a ghost and they ran for their lives." The man, who did not want his name released but is described as a grandfather in his 60s, had apparently suffered an asthma attack and fell unconscious. "The family called a private undertaker who took what they thought was a dead body to the morgue," Kupelo said. Relatives did not call paramedics, but instead phoned the mortuary, assuming he was dead. The morgue's owner said that the worker who picked up the supposedly dead man examined the body, checked his pulse, looked for a heartbeat, but there was nothing. Ayanda Maqolo was there when the elderly man woke up and started screaming after having been in the refrigerator with other corpses for at least 21 hours. "He asked, 'How did I get here?'" the owner recalled the man saying. The owner added that the chilling experience even gave him "nightmares." Kupelo said that the health department wanted to publicize the incident because it exposes a real problem. "This is why we're saying as a health department that people should call health services to have their relatives declared and certified dead, and not these private mortuaries," he said. "Those guys aren't trained paramedics. They're about business." The "dead" man, who suffered from dehydration, was hospitalized briefly after the incident. He has since returned home to his family, Kupelo said.
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