Resident and community response
- Local residents are frustrated, citing:
- Public health risks from decaying animal remains.
- Impact on tourism — visitors (including families and tourists) are horrified by the sight of slaughter and bloodied beaches.
- Animal cruelty concerns — chickens are sometimes drowned or left to suffer. Animal welfare groups and individuals have rescued birds.
- Residents have called for municipal signage banning the practice, better enforcement of bylaws, and cleanup. There’s tension between cultural/religious rights and public space regulations.
Legal and official side
- Municipal bylaws in eThekwini (Durban metro, which includes Amanzimtoti) generally prohibit slaughtering animals in public places, littering, and activities that create health hazards. However, enforcement appears inconsistent.
- Similar complaints date back years (e.g., 2006 reports of beach slaughters in the Durban area).
This is a clash between traditional practices (common in parts of South Africa) and modern public beach use. If you’re asking for news, awareness, or local updates, it’s a debated topic locally right now. For animal welfare angles, groups like the SPCA get involved in rescues.


