
Mpumalanga health spokesman Ronnie Masilela confirmed the department had suspended the contract pending an investigation.
Demand is strong in the country for human ingredients for use in traditional potions. Even the water used to wash corpses in the hospital mortuary is being sold to traditional healers.
"If they are selling parts from the hospital, they can steal from someone who has just died or is about to die," said Reverend Grace Masilela, a Nazarene Church preacher who said she was once a traditional healer.
Masilela revealed this at the weekend to a Swazi newspaper, but the practice of selling human organs from the mortuary at Raleigh Fitkin Memorial Hospital in the central commercial hub of Manzini is an open secret.
Traditional healers come to town to purchase herbs at the Manzini market and end their trip with a visit to the mortuary.
A human brain costs R1 000. Other parts, from internal organs to body fat, fetch from R400 to R1 000.
Body parts are roasted and pulverised into an ash, and mixed with herbs for a potion that is either drunk, ingested or in some cases rubbed into the blood through a razor cut to the skin. The user is then endowed with supernatural power, according to belief.
"Children's parts are favoured because they are considered pure. An elderly person's parts are liked because the consumer takes on the person's wisdom," said Charles Mngomezulu, a traditional healer, who added that he does not dabble in muti.













Comment: Since empires hoping to turn into police states depend on a very fearful populace, these trigger-happy cops are not only undisciplined but encouraged to act this way by the state itself. The very state that protects them every time they murder an innocent citizen and gives them the incentive to do it again, knowing they will get away with it.
For a good analysis, read: Why TSA, wars, state defined diets, seat-belt laws, the war on drugs, police brutality, and efforts to control the internet, are essential to the state