Many months
after a man from Mozambique fell to his death from the undercarriage of an
aeroplane flying over London, his family has been traced.
Jose Matada's body was found in
Portman Avenue, Mortlake, in September 2012, soon after a flight from Luanda,
Angola, flew over the residential area.
He had no identity papers on him
and no-one had reported him missing. Police were unable to trace his next of
kin, but his family recently came forward and identified themselves to the
authorities in Mozambique.
Jose's mother, Eugenia Ndazwedjua,
and his older brother, Paulino Domingos Matada, who live in Maputo, said they
had read about his death in a local newspaper called Verdade.
"I was shocked, it was a huge
feeling, knowing he'd already been dead for some time - an overwhelming
feeling," said Paulino.
He had thought his brother was in
South Africa, where he had been employed for several years as a housekeeper and
gardener.
The last time Paulino spoke to his
brother was in June 2012. After that, when he tried to call him, he couldn't
get through.
"I called others who knew him
there, but they said, 'he's disappeared'. I didn't expect him to go to another
country, I just thought he'd suddenly appear here one day, or call."
Paulino is still not sure why Jose
stowed away on the flight from Angola.
He wonders if Jose was trying to
re-join his former employer, who had moved from South Africa to Switzerland.
"When I heard he had died, I found a Sim card of his here that had
messages, with declarations of love on it."
Whatever the reason - whether Jose
had fallen in love with his former employer, or whether he was trying to get to
Europe to get her help in finding a job - it was a desperate measure. Most
stowaways on long-haul flights are killed by the cold and lack of oxygen.
Jose's mother Eugenia wishes that
his body could be returned to Mozambique. "He should have been buried in
our village, next to his father, next to his great-uncles and aunts, and my
other two children who died - but we have no money to bring his body back
home."
The family say they have been told
that it would cost £7,000 (£11,500) to repatriate Jose's body.
"I am struggling since he
died... His father died a long time ago, but even though we are poor, I had my
children - that's the only consolation I had."
There is nothing to mark the grave
where Jose Matada is buried in Twickenham, west London - no headstone with his
name, or his date of birth.
But we know now that Jose Matada
was born on 8 September 1985. He died in London on 9 September 2012, the
morning after his 27th birthday. (BBC)
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