A Makhanda community is grieving after the body of 14-year-old Endinako Dudu was recovered from the Kowie River, bringing a tragic end to a desperate search that had gripped the area for days.

Endinako, a Grade 8 learner at Mary Waters High School, was reported missing after severe flooding struck the Makana Local Municipality earlier this week. She was on her way home from school when she was swept away by powerful currents while attempting to cross the Kowie River โ a crossing that, on any ordinary day, would have been unremarkable.
This was not an ordinary day.
Heavy Rains, Rising Waters, and a Desperate Search
The Makhanda area was battered by some of the heaviest rainfall residents say they have seen in recent months. Rivers and streams swelled rapidly, drainage systems were overwhelmed, roads were submerged, and access to several neighbourhoods was temporarily cut off entirely.
Emergency services were activated immediately after Endinako was reported missing. Search-and-rescue teams โ including local disaster management officials, trained divers, and additional support personnel โ worked under dangerous and exhausting conditions to locate the teenager.
At one point, the search had to be suspended due to poor visibility and dangerously strong water currents. Teams resumed at first light, pressing on with the grim determination that defines rescue operations in their most heartbreaking moments.
Tragically, the search did not end in a rescue. Endinako’s body was recovered from the river, devastating her family, her school, and the wider Makhanda community.
A Daughter, a Learner, a Life Cut Short
Endinako Dudu was fourteen years old. She was a Grade 8 learner with years of schooling still ahead of her and a future that will now never be known.
The Dudu family has been left to process an unimaginable loss โ the kind of grief that no condolence visit or official statement can adequately address. Municipal leaders visited the family to offer their condolences and support, describing the incident as a painful reminder of the deadly consequences of extreme weather events.
The Mary Waters High School community, along with residents across Makhanda, has been left in deep shock. In a community where everyone knows everyone, the loss of a child is felt collectively and profoundly.
Flooding Leaves Wider Trail of Destruction
Endinako’s death was the most devastating consequence of the flooding, but it was not the only one. The heavy rains caused widespread damage across the Makana Local Municipality, affecting both formal and informal settlements.
Structural damage was reported in multiple homes. Fallen trees blocked roads across the area. Electricity supply was disrupted in several neighbourhoods, and critical infrastructure suffered significant strain under the weight of the sustained downpours.
Municipal officials have begun assessing the full extent of the damage and are coordinating relief efforts for displaced and affected residents. Disaster management teams remain on high alert, as further rainfall could worsen already fragile conditions across the municipality.
Calls for Safer Infrastructure Grow Louder
In the wake of Endinako’s death, community members have raised urgent questions about infrastructure, safety, and accountability. Many residents are calling for improved stormwater management systems, better flood warnings at the community level, and safer river crossing points โ particularly on routes used daily by schoolchildren.
The tragedy has once again exposed the vulnerability of communities where infrastructure has not kept pace with the realities of increasingly severe weather events. For many in Makhanda, the loss of Endinako is not just a personal tragedy โ it is evidence of a systemic failure that must be urgently addressed.
Authorities have reiterated warnings to all residents, particularly parents and guardians, to caution children against crossing rivers or flooded pathways during heavy rainfall. Swollen rivers, officials stress, can become dangerously unpredictable within minutes โ even in areas typically considered shallow and safe.
Rest in Peace, Endinako
The death of Endinako Dudu is a tragedy that should never have happened. She was a child walking home from school โ doing exactly what millions of learners across South Africa do every single day.
As Makhanda mourns, her story must not simply become another statistic in a seasonal flood report. It must become a call to action โ for better infrastructure, better warning systems, and a genuine commitment to protecting the lives of children in communities that remain dangerously exposed to the growing threat of extreme weather.
Endinako deserved to make it home. The community she left behind deserves to know that her death was not in vain.
The Dudu family and the Mary Waters High School community are in our thoughts.