Showing posts with label Mandela Watch. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mandela Watch. Show all posts

Sunday, 21 July 2013

South Africa urges Nigerians to pray for Nelson Mandela

Lagos - Amb. Mokgethi Monaisa, Consul-General of the South African High Commission in Nigeria, on Sunday urged Nigerians to join in prayers for former South African President, Dr Nelson Mandela’s quick recovery.

Monaisa in Lagos, said that South Africans were “earnestly praying” for their former president’s recovery, and would also need the prayers of the Nigerian people.

``As we all know, our former president is in hospital right now. South Africans are holding special prayer sessions for him, because we cannot afford to miss him.

[caption id="attachment_279534" align="alignnone" width="412"]File photo: Nelson Mandela File photo: Nelson Mandela[/caption]

``We are also calling on our Nigerian brothers and sisters, to join us in praying for his quick recovery. We know that Nigerians and the rest of the world also hold him in high esteem.

``We believe that Nigeria and South Africa are close allies. So we need to jointly pray for him to live for many more years,” he said.

The envoy said that Mandela’s leadership qualities, as exemplified in the emancipation of South Africa, would forever remain indelible in the minds of the people.

Monaisa also recalled Mandela’s role in the fight against apartheid, racism, poverty, corruption and inequality in South Africa.

``We still need him, because he contributed immensely to the attainment of today’s South Africa.

``We were all happy when the UN set aside an International Day for our illustrious son. How many other African leaders have had such global honour bestowed on them.

``We can all see how important, and why we all need to pray for him to see more years,'' he said.

The consul-general said there was a lot for present and upcoming African leaders to learn from Mandela’s “selfless leadership qualities”.

He added that one of the ways they could achieve that was to “shun corruption, poor governance, self-aggrandisement and politics of rancour”.

The UN has declared July 18 as the Nelson Mandela International Day, as a way of recognising the Nobel Prize winner's contribution to reconciliation.

Mandela, who turned 95 three days ago, is spending his 43rd day in hospital,, with complications associated with old age. (NAN)

Friday, 19 July 2013

Tutu pays tribute to Mandela after hospital visit

JOHANNESBURG (AFP) - A day after turning 95, Nelson Mandela was Friday visited by fellow peace laureate, archbishop Desmond Tutu, who praised him for continuing to inspire the world even from his sickbed.

"We have a special gift in a man who can unite not only South Africa but the world, even from his sickbed," Tutu told journalists outside a Pretoria hospital where the anti-apartheid icon is critically ill.

[caption id="attachment_404882" align="alignnone" width="412"]South Africa's Nobel Peace Prize laureate Desmond Tutu (R) and staff from the Desmond and Leah Tutu Legacy hold up a poster wishing Nelson Mandela a happy birthday at the Marconi Beam Public Primary School in Cape Town on 18 July 2013. Nelson Mandela spent his 95th birthday in hospital Thursday but his health was "steadily improving", the South African presidency said, as people around the world honoured his legacy with charitable acts.  With a wave of good deeds planned to mark Nelson Mandela Day, South Africans awoke to word that their national hero was getting better six fraught weeks after he was admitted to hospital with a recurring lung infection.  AFP PHOTO South Africa's Nobel Peace Prize laureate Desmond Tutu (R) and staff from the Desmond and Leah Tutu Legacy hold up a poster wishing Nelson Mandela a happy birthday at the Marconi Beam Public Primary School in Cape Town on AFP PHOTO[/caption]

Tutu said he found Mandela asleep but managed to hold his hand.

"He inspired us to become a great country and the world to become compassionate," he said.

Tutu also read the messages of support posted by the public on the wall of the MediClinic Hospital.

Mandela celebrated his 95th birthday on Thursday, six weeks after he was admitted in hospital for treatment for a respiratory condition. The much-loved icon spent the day surrounded by his family in hospital and also received a visit from President Jacob Zuma and other prominent politicians.

Mandela's granddaughter Ndileka described him as "steady and improving."

His condition had in the last two weeks said to have been "precarious".

Mandela's birthday, which was in 2010 declared by the United Nations as the International Mandela Day, is dedicated to good courses.

People are urged to spent 67 minutes of their time doing charity work. The number symbolises the years Mandela spent in politics.

Mandela was rushed to hospital on June 8 with a recurring lung infection that had already put him in hospital three times in less than a year.

Wednesday, 17 July 2013

Obama pays tribute as ailing Mandela turns 95

JOHANNESBURG (AFP) - US President Barack Obama paid warm tribute to South Africa's Nelson Mandela for his 95th birthday on Thursday, which the anti-apartheid icon will spend in hospital recovering from a lung infection.

Obama's message came as Mandela's youngest daughter Zindzi said her father was making "remarkable" progress, and as admirers around the world prepared to honour the former South African president's legacy with a wave of charitable acts.

[caption id="attachment_379050" align="alignnone" width="412"]*Obama *Obama[/caption]
Obama, who visited South Africa last month but was unable to see Mandela because of his illness, was fulsome in his praise of the former statesman, referring to him by his clan name, Madiba.

"Our family was deeply moved by our visit to Madiba's former cell on Robben Island during our recent trip to South Africa, and we will forever draw strength and inspiration from his extraordinary example of moral courage, kindness, and humility," Obama said in a statement.

The president called on people to honour the elderly leader by taking part in Nelson Mandela Day on Thursday, when admirers around the world will uphold his legacy with charitable acts.

Biker gangs will clean the streets, volunteers will paint schools and politicians will spend 67 minutes on worthy projects -- all to mark Mandela's 67 years of public service.

"Let us return Madiba's sacrifices and contributions through our own efforts to build a better society," said South African President Jacob Zuma.

Near Pretoria, Zuma himself will try to channel Mandela's cross-community appeal by delivering government housing to poor whites.

Children in schools around the country will kick off the day by singing "Happy Birthday" to the former prisoner, who also marks 15th anniversary of his marriage to third wife Graca Machel.

The government will also host a ceremony for the symbolic handing over of Mandela's new high-tech ID card, which will be received by Zindzi.

The event is laden with symbolism in a country where apartheid was enforced by pass books, which black citizens were forced to carry and which limited movement to certain areas at certain times.

The United Nations declared the Nobel Peace laureate's birthday Mandela Day in 2010, but for many this year it takes on extra poignancy.

Mandela has spent the last 41 days in a Pretoria hospital in critical but stable condition after being admitted for a recurring lung infection.

Family and friends have said he is now responding to treatment and breathing with the aid of a machine.

Zindzi said her father was making "remarkable" progress in hospital.

"He responds very well... with his eyes, and he nods and sometimes he lifts his hand like to shake your hand," she told Britain's Sky News on Wednesday.

Mandela's successor as president, Thabo Mbeki, has even suggested he might be discharged from hospital soon.

"There was a time that we were all extremely anxious and worried, and we were prepared for the worst," said Zindzi. "But he continues to amaze us every day."

-- 'Make the world a better place' --

Global luminaries, pop stars and ordinary people around the world have joined South Africans in pledging support for Mandela on his birthday.

"I will also be giving my 67 minutes to make the world a better place, one small step at a time," British business magnate Richard Branson vowed in a recorded message.

In Manila, capital of the Philippines, 50 abandoned street children will get a television studio tour and see performances by local artists.

On Saturday, the Australian city of Melbourne will hold a concert featuring local and African artists, while a music festival later this year in Norway will promote equality in schools.

Born on July 18, 1918, Mandela fought against white rule in South Africa as a young lawyer and was convicted of treason in 1964.

He spent the next 27 years in jail.

It was in part through his willingness to forgive his white jailers that Mandela made his indelible mark on history.

After negotiating an end to apartheid, he became South Africa's first black president, drawing a line under centuries of colonial and racist suppression.

He then led reconciliation in the deeply divided country.

Mandela's peace-making spirit has won him worldwide respect.

"Never before in history was one human being so universally acknowledged in his lifetime as the embodiment of magnanimity and reconciliation as Nelson Mandela," said Archbishop Desmond Tutu, himself a Nobel Peace laureate.

But the sunset of Mandela's life has been somewhat eclipsed by bitter infighting among his relatives.

A row over his final resting place has seen three of his children's graves dug up and their remains moved amid public brawling and legal action among his children and grandchildren.

Friday, 12 July 2013

Mandela's wife says now 'less anxious' about his health

JOHANNESBURG (AFP) - Graca Machel, the wife of ailing South African icon Nelson Mandela, said she was less anxious about his condition Friday, five weeks after he was admitted to hospital.

"He continues to respond positively to treatment. I would say that today I'm less anxious than I was a week ago," she told state-backed SABC television.

It is the latest in a series of upbeat accounts, which seem to suggest that while the 94-year-old's condition remains "critical", it has improved somewhat.

[caption id="attachment_398100" align="alignnone" width="412"]Nelson Mandela Nelson Mandela[/caption]

After visiting Mandela late Thursday, President Jacob Zuma said he was "responding to treatment."

"He remains as much of a fighter now as he was 50 years ago," Zuma said, marking the anniversary of a police raid that led to Mandela's life sentence in prison.

Earlier in the week Buyelekhaya Dalindyebo, who is one of Mandela's nephews and king of his Thembu tribe, said the former statesman was "conscious".

"He could not talk, but he recognised me and made a few gestures of acknowledgement, like moving his eyes."

Two weeks ago the prognosis appeared much bleaker, with family massing at his Pretoria hospital as Zuma abruptly cancelled a trip to Mozambique.

Doctors are said to have ruled out switching off Mandela's life support machines unless there is serious organ failure.

Court documents filed on behalf of the family last month described Mandela's condition as "perilous", with one claiming he was in a "vegetative state".

Mandela, who turns 95 next week, was rushed to a Pretoria hospital on June 8 with a recurring lung infection.

Thursday, 11 July 2013

Mandela responding to treatment but still critical

JOHANNESBURG - Nelson Mandela is responding to treatment but still in a critical condition, South African President Jacob Zuma said Wednesday after visiting the global peace icon in hospital.

Zuma's comments came after one of Mandela's nephews told AFP that the former president was conscious.

"We are encouraged that Madiba is responding to treatment," said Zuma, referring to the anti-apartheid hero by his clan name.

Zuma added the 94-year-old is remains in "critical but stable" condition after more than one month of intensive hospital treatment.

He urged the public to continue "showering him with love which gives him and the family strength".

Mandela was rushed to a Pretoria hospital on June 8 over a recurring lung infection.

Buyelekhaya Dalindyebo, who is one of Mandela's nephew and king of his Thembu tribe, told AFP Wednesday the former statesman was "conscious".

"He could not talk, but he recognised me and made a few gestures of acknowledgement, like moving his eyes," said Dalindyebo.

[caption id="attachment_398100" align="alignnone" width="412"]Nelson Mandela Nelson Mandela[/caption]


Doctors are said to have ruled out turning off Mandela's life support machines unless there is serious organ failure.

Court documents filed on behalf of the family last month described Mandela's condition as "perilous," with one claiming he was in a "vegetative state".

According to friend Denis Goldberg, doctors had considered turning off his life support, but decided it was not warranted in the absence of organ failure.

It is Mandela's longest hospitalisation since he was released from prison in 1990.

Madiba's hospital stay has been overshadowed by a bitter family feud over the reburial of his three children.

Their remains were exhumed from the family graveyard in rural Qunu in 2011 by the ailing icon's eldest grandson Mandla, and reburied in Mvezo -- where Mandela was born.

Last week, 15 members of the Mandela family led by the Nobel laureate's eldest daughter Makaziwe successfully sought an urgent court application forcing Mandla to return them.

The family has opened a case of grave tampering against Mandla, who is a traditional chief in the Mvezo village.

The spat prompted an impassioned plea from Archbishop Desmond Tutu, asking the family not to "besmirch" the peace icon's name.

He said it was like "spitting in Madiba's face".

Meanwhile, messages of support continue to pour in for the man regarded as the father of democratic South Africa.

In a recorded message, the Dalai Lama expressed his "admiration about the great man Nelson Mandela".

Members of the public including politicians have also been posting messages on the wall outside the hospital and leaving flower bouquets on a daily basis.

Security at the hospital remains tight, with police searching vehicles entering the premises.

South Africa on Thursday commemorates 50 years since the police raid on a Johannesburg farm where top leaders from Mandela's African National Congress were arrested.

The evidence from the raid led to his 27- year-imprisonment.

After his release Mandela led negotiations to dismantle the white-minority regime and became the country's first black president after all-race elections in 1994.

South Africans are preparing to celebrate his 95th birthday on July 18.

The day is dedicated to doing good deeds for others, in honour of Mandela's selfless struggle.

Several international personalities, including Sir Richard Branson, Bill Clinton and Tutu have voiced their support for what is known as Mandela Day.(AFP)

Monday, 8 July 2013

Mandela’s grandson battles Thembu King over chieftaincy

JOHANNESBURG (AFP) - Nelson Mandela's grandson on Monday denounced efforts to remove him as chief of the anti-apartheid icon's clan following a bitter family feud, as the former president started a second month in hospital.

Mandla Mandela rejected attempts by Thembu King Buyelekhaya Dalindyebo to strip him of his Madiba chieftaincy as the latest in a line of "delusional" statements from the monarch.

[caption id="attachment_402527" align="alignnone" width="412"]The grandson of ailing former South African President Nelson Mandela, Mandla Mandela, talks to journalists during a press conference recently. AFP The grandson of ailing former South African President Nelson Mandela, Mandla Mandela, talks to journalists during a press conference recently. AFP[/caption]

"He doesn't have the authority to do that," Mandla's spokesman Freddy Pilusa told AFP.

Mandla, 39, earlier said processes to appoint and remove chiefs were lengthy. "King Dalindyebo has a habit of making delusional announcements," Mandla said in a statement.

"You don't just wake up and call a meeting of followers and make such a decision," he added.

Nelson Mandela handpicked Mandla as his successor to head the Madiba clan -- one of many in the Thembu nation -- in the Eastern Cape province's village of Mvezo in 2007.

But a bitter family argument over the 94-year-old Nobel peace laureate's burial place has put Mandla in the firing line.

Fifteen family members won a court order to rebury the remains of Mandela's three deceased children, after Mandla moved them two years ago without consulting relatives.

The family accused Mandla of exhuming the graves to ensure that Mandela is buried on land owned by his grandson, who they said wanted to cash in on tourists visiting the gravesite.

Mandela has said in the past he wants to be buried with his family.

Last Thursday Mandla lashed out against his brothers, aunts and other relatives in a televised news conference.

He called two brothers illegitimate and accused a third of impregnating his wife.

He also accused his relatives of trying to cash in the family name.

Dalindyebo, whose authority covers the Madiba clan, wants to remove Mandla as chief for using the graves "as a dancing floor".

The head of South Africa's traditional leaders association said Dalindyebo may be on shaky ground in unilaterally declaring Mandla's ousting.

Association's president Phathekile Holomisa told AFP a series of procedures must be observed.

"The Mandela royal family has to refer the matter to the traditional council of Mvezo," Holomisa told AFP.

After that the royal court comprising all the tribal leaders would decide on the complaint.

Finally South Africa's government had to sign off on the removal, he added.

Sunday, 7 July 2013

Xhosa king wants Mandela grandson's chieftancy revoked

JOHANNESBURG (AFP) - A South African traditional king will try to revoke the chieftaincy of Nelson Mandela's grandson Mandla after a bitter family feud over gravesites, South African media reported Sunday.

King Buyelekhaya Dalindyebo, the Xhosa king who rules the Thembu tribe to which the Mandela family belongs, accused Mandla Mandela of disgracing the family after the younger Mandela launched a nationally-televised tirade against his relatives and the king.

"Mandla has never been the legitimate heir of the Madiba family," he told City Press newspaper, using the Mandela clan name.

"I will write to him and tell him that my wish is that he is not involved in any of the affairs," he added.

Nelson Mandela handpicked Mandla, 39, as his successor to head the Madiba clan in 2007.

Dalindyebo's spokeswoman told the Sunday Times incorrect processes had been followed to install Mandla.
[caption id="attachment_402527" align="alignnone" width="412"]The grandson of ailing former South African President Nelson Mandela, Mandla Mandela, talks to journalists during a press conference recently. AFP The grandson of ailing former South African President Nelson Mandela, Mandla Mandela, talks to journalists during a press conference recently. AFP[/caption]

But the king himself is under fire from several chiefs who want him removed, according to South Africa's Sunday Times.

The 59-year-old is appealing a 2009 conviction of kidnapping and culpable homicide of subjects accused of criminal acts.

Dalindyebo had previously accused Mandla of trying to usurp him, but Mandla spoke dismissively of the monarch this week.

"I don't want to waste my time with people who obviously don't understand issues because they are uneducated," he said.

However, the royal family can only recommend a chief's removal to the political government, which has the final say.

"The king can't do so on his own and the king can't just choose who should succeed the chief," Zingisa Bokwe, secretary of the Eastern Cape province's House of Traditional Leaders, told City Press.

As the 94-year-old anti-apartheid hero lies critically ill in hospital, a fierce family feud over the gravesites of his three deceased children has erupted.

Fifteen family members won a court order on Wednesday against Mandla after he moved the graves two years ago without their consent.

As the ailing Mandela approaches the end of his life, they accused Mandla of moving the graves to his homestead so that his grandfather would be buried there.

Nelson Mandela has often said he wants to be laid to rest in his childhood village of Qunu in the rural south.

Saturday, 6 July 2013

Mandela still critical as grandson to lodge complaint

JOHANNESBURG (AFP) - Nelson Mandela remained hospitalised in a critical state for a fourth week Saturday after doctors ruled out turning off his life support unless he suffered massive organ failure.

Meanwhile his grandson's lawyers were planning to lodge an official complaint over a court document which they say falsely claimed he was "in a permanent vegetative state".

The anti-apartheid hero's health condition was unchanged over the weekend, South Africa's presidential spokesman Mac Maharaj told AFP.

[caption id="attachment_402527" align="alignnone" width="412"]The grandson of ailing former South African President Nelson Mandela, Mandla Mandela, talks to journalists during a press conference recently. AFP The grandson of ailing former South African President Nelson Mandela, Mandla Mandela, talks to journalists during a press conference recently. AFP[/caption]

He is in a critical but stable condition after his June 8 admittance for an obstinate pulmonary infection and relies on machines to help him breathe.

A close friend of the former statesman had said turning off life support was discussed and ultimately dismissed.

"I was told the matter had been raised and the doctors said they would only consider such a situation if there was a genuine state of organ failure," Denis Goldberg, who has known Mandela for over 50 years, told AFP on Friday.

"Since that hasn't occurred they were quite prepared to go on stabilising him until he recovers."

The 80-year-old Goldberg was convicted along with Mandela in 1964 for their fight against white-minority rule.

He visited the former president in hospital on Monday.

A court document filed by a lawyer for Mandela's family 10 days ago stated the 94-year-old was "assisted in breathing by a life support machine".

"The Mandela family have been advised by the medical practitioners that his life support machine should be switched off," the court filing read.

"Rather than prolonging his suffering, the Mandela family is exploring this option as a very real probability."

The document - which was designed to press a court to urgently settle a family row over the remains of Mandela's children -- also stated that Mandela was "in a permanent vegetative state".

South Africa's presidency has said that is not the case, but refused to give further details of his condition, citing the need to respect Mandela's privacy.

President Jacob Zuma, Mandela family members and his close friends have reported since last week his condition has improved.

Maharaj told AFP on Friday that Zuma's office "had not been party" to the court material and would not speculate on its content.

"We did not file any document and we are not saying that it's true or not true," he said.

Earlier Goldberg said Mandela was "clearly a very ill man, but he was conscious and he tried to move his mouth and eyes when I talked to him."

"He is definitely not unconscious," he added, saying "he was aware of who I was".

Mandela spent 27 years in prison for fighting white-minority rule and went on to lead the process of racial reconciliation as South Africa's first black president.

Meanwhile an acerbic feud between his relatives showed little sign of abating.

Lawyers for his grandson Mandla would lodge a formal complaint against his relatives' legal team who they claim gave a false version of Nelson Mandela's health.

"They relied on certain affidavits in particular with regards to the health of the (former) president which wasn't true," Mandla's lawyer Gary Jansen told Sapa news agency.

The statesman's three deceased children were buried at his proposed burial ground in Qunu, his childhood village, on Thursday.

Fifteen family members had won a court order against Mandla after he moved the graves two year ago without their consent.

But the fall-out from the dispute continued to reverberate.

In nationally-televised news conference Mandla accused one of his brothers of impregnating his wife and said others were born out of wedlock.

The family had laid a charge of grave tampering against him, and investigators were wrapping up the case, a spokesman told AFP.

"The police are finalising the investigation and the docket will be handed over to the senior prosecutor for his decision on Tuesday," said police spokesman Mzukisi Fatyela.

Leading South Africans urged Mandela's family to end their increasingly acerbic feud over the gravesites.

South African Nobel peace laureate Desmond Tutu pleaded with them not to "besmirch" the former president's name.

"Please, please, please may we think not only of ourselves. It's like spitting in Madiba's face," said Tutu in a statement, using Mandela's clan name.

Maharaj also urged the family to solve the increasingly bitter dispute "amicably".

'I have lived my life': Mandela mulled death in unseen video

JOHANNESBURG (AFP) - Nearly 15 years ago Nelson Mandela was unperturbed by his own death, telling a dying teenager that he had lived his life to the full.

The video dating from 1998, broadcast by American news channel CBS on Thursday as Mandela remained in critically ill in hospital, showed the towering South African statesman visiting a 15-year-old, also named Nelson.

"Understanding the fact that I'm near the end, I remain optimistic with my morale very high, because I'm saying I have lived my life," the statesman, then 80, told the teen, who was dying of brain cancer.

In the amateur video the boy, his head shaved, smiled shyly from his bed at the peace icon, who wore one of his colourful trademark shirts.

Posters of cars adorned the wall next to where the then-president sat holding a teacup.

"If your spirit is not optimistic, your morale is not high, medicine is not very effective," the then president said.

The boy died under three months after the visit.

Broadcast as the 94-year-old nears one month in hospital, the words carry added poignancy.

According to court documents from Mandela family lawyers, filed nine days ago, doctors believed Mandela was in a "permanent vegetative state" and they advised his family to turn off his life support machine.

South Africa's presidency has since said his condition has improved and on Thursday denied he is in a vegetative state

Mandela family feud: My brother "impregnated'' my wife

JOHANNESBURG (AFP) - A grave-digging dispute has added to the bitter family feuding, over sex, money and power, among Nelson Mandela's heirs which has set South Africans on edge as the anti-apartheid icon lies critically ill in hospital.

The Nobel peace laureate is famous the world over for spending 27 years in jail and then reconciling with his white oppressors after he became the nation's first black president.

But as the 94-year-old Mandela fights for his life, a legal battle among feuding relatives over his eventual resting place has descended into a messy public soap opera.

Mandela's three deceased children were reburied Thursday after 15 family members, including his three daughters and wife Graca Machel, won an urgent court order against Mandela's oldest grandson, Mandla.

The family said the 39-year-old Mandla, who is the clan's traditional chief had moved the remains from Mandela's childhood home in 2011 without the consent of the rest of the family.

Shortly before the remains were re-buried, Mandla, in a nationally televised news conference Thursday, launched a tirade against the rest of the family. He accused his aunt, the anti-apartheid hero's daughter Makaziwe, of trying to "sow divisions and destruction".

After saying he wouldn't air the family's "dirty linen" in public, Mandla went on to say his brother Mbuso had "impregnated my wife". He also said his two other brothers were born out of wedlock.

The dispute has earned the Mandelas the doubtful accolade of being seen as South Africa's Ewings, a comparison with US soap opera Dallas which recounts a wealthy Texas family's intrigues and conspiracies.

"Mandla Mandela has become the veritable JR Ewing of the Mandela family," internet website Daily Maverick wrote, comparing him to the show's anti-hero.

The grave dispute touches on Mandela's own eventual resting place. In the past he had said he wanted to be buried in Qunu, his rural childhood village and retirement home in the country's rolling southern hills.

The former statesman's parents lie here, as do Mandela's three children, who died in 1948, 1969 and 2005.

His family argued Mandla wanted to change Mandela's gravesite to Mvezo and so moved the children's remains to stake his claim for a new burial site.

South Africans have reacted with shock at their disagreements.

"The public is trying to give them space to run their affairs but they are busy displaying their dirty linen for all to see," wrote Michael Mokoena in a letter local daily The Times.

"I should think they can come together and try to resolve this matter and not take each other to court," a woman named Johanna told AFP.

The tiff has also elicited comments from the country's moral compass and another Nobel peace laureate, Desmond Tutu.

"Please, please, please may we think not only of ourselves. It's almost like spitting in Madiba's face," Tutu pleaded in a statement, referring to Mandela by his clan name.

Presidential spokesman Mac Maharaj called the dispute "regrettable" and urged the Mandela damily to resolve their differences "as amicably and as soon as possible".

But the scandal does not stop there.

Mandla, 39, has had two traditional marriages interdicted by his estranged first wife, and is locked in land dispute with his neighbours.

He has also disappointed in parliament, where he serves under the ruling African National Congress, the movement his grandfather led.

Another lawmaker, Mandela's ex-wife Winnie Madikizela-Mandela, was convicted of kidnapping a youth in 1980 who her bodyguards later killed.

A court convicted her of fraud in 2003, and a posh private school almost had her assets seized in May this year over $10,000 (7,800 euro) debt over a relative's school fees.

The Mandela family, which includes the anti-apartheid hero's three daughters, 17 grand-children and 12 great-grandchildren, avoided the media spotlight during his political career.

But after his last public appearance in 2010 some seemed to find their family name's value irresistible.

While Mandela always strictly limited commercial use of his name to charities, four of his grandchildren in 2010 set up the clothing brand LWTF Clothing, acronym for their grand father's famous autobiography Long Walk to Freedom.

The line's t-shirts liberally display his signature and photo.

His eldest child Makaziwe and her daughter Tukwini later launched the "House of Mandela" wine label.

In another episode that jars with the global peace icon's image, two other granddaughters recounted their high-society life in a reality television show, dubbed "Being Mandela".

Zenani and her half-sister Makaziwe made headlines this year trying to remove three directors Mandela appointed to the trust fund that holds the family fortune.

At stake is the $1.7 million the global icon has made through royalties of his autobiography and art works carrying his hand prints and prison number, 46664.

The sisters accused the trustees, including respected lawyer George Bizos -- a close friend who defended Mandela in the case that sent him to prison -- of interfering in family affairs.

The three trustees for their part told the court Mandela didn't want his daughters to manage his affairs.

Friday, 5 July 2013

Doctors reject turning off Mandela's life support

JOHANNESBURG (AFP) - Nelson Mandela's doctors have rejected the idea of turning off the ailing icon's life support unless he suffers massive organ failure, a close family friend told AFP.

Denis Goldberg -- an anti-apartheid activist who has been Mandela's friend for more than half a century -- on Friday said the issue of turning off life support was discussed and ultimately dismissed.

"I was told the matter had been raised and the doctors said they would only consider such a situation if there was a genuine state of organ failure," Goldberg said.
[caption id="attachment_279534" align="alignnone" width="412"]File photo: Nelson Mandela File photo: Nelson Mandela [/caption]

"Since that hasn't occurred they were quite prepared to go on stabilising him until he recovers."

The 80-year-old Goldberg was convicted along with Mandela in 1964 for their fight against white-minority rule.

He visited the former president in hospital on Monday.

A court document filed by a lawyer for Mandela's family nine days ago stated the 94-year-old was "assisted in breathing by a life support machine."

"The Mandela family have been advised by the medical practitioners that his life support machine should be switched off," the court filing read.

"Rather than prolonging his suffering, the Mandela family is exploring this option as a very real probability."

The document - which was designed to press a court to urgently settle a family row over the remains of Mandela's children -- also stated that Mandela was "in a permanent vegetative state."

South Africa's presidency has stated that is not the case, but has refused to give further details of his condition, citing the need to respect Mandela's privacy.

On the day the document was drafted, President Jacob Zuma abruptly cancelled a trip to Mozambique to confer with Mandela's doctors amid fears the 94-year-old may be close to the end.

Zuma, Mandela family members and his close friends have since reported his condition has improved.

South African presidential spokesman Mac Maharaj told AFP on Friday that Zuma's office "had not been party" to the court material and would not speculate on its content.

"We did not file any document and we are not saying that it's true or not true," he said.

Earlier Goldberg said Mandela was "clearly a very ill man, but he was conscious and he tried to move his mouth and eyes when I talked to him."

"He is definitely not unconscious," he added, saying "he was aware of who I was".

Mandela, who spent 27 years in prison for fighting white-minority rule and went on to lead the process of racial reconciliation as South Africa's first black president, has now spent a month in hospital after being admitted with a recurrent lung infection.

South Africa's parliament on Friday hosted a prayer service in a Cape Town cathedral where Mandela was hailed as "an icon of a truly free South Africa".

"It is a reflective period for our people," said national assembly deputy speaker NomaIndiya Mfeketo.

"The thought of Madiba in hospital indisposed due to illness is harrowing. This is not what we wish for our beloved hero."

The ruling African National Congress (ANC) dedicated its annual Gauteng provincial general council meeting in Pretoria to Mandela.

"We want to acknowledge him as a comrade who not only stood for

the ANC as a servant of the people of South Africa; he also stood

for values of human rights and justice universally," said ANC Gauteng deputy chairwoman Gwen Ramokgopa.

The delegates, dressed in white T-shirts bearing Mandela's image

and the words "Long live Nelson Mandela", sang struggle songs dedicated to the anti-apartheid icon, the South African Press Association reported.

Meanwhile leading South Africans urged Mandela's family to end an increasingly acerbic family feud over the gravesites of three of Mandela's children.

On Thursday Mandela's grandson Mandla launched a tirade at close family members who took him to court to force him to reinter Mandela's children at the revered former South African leader's proposed burial ground in Qunu, his childhood village.

Mandla accused one of his brothers of impregnating his wife and said others were born out of wedlock.

The three bodies were reburied Thursday in Qunu, but the fall-out from the dispute continued to reverberate.

South African Nobel peace laureate Desmond Tutu pleaded with Mandela's family not to "besmirch" the former president's name.

"Please, please, please may we think not only of ourselves. It's like spitting in Madiba's face," said Tutu in a statement, using Mandela's clan name.

Presidential spokesman Maharaj also urged the family to solve the increasingly bitter dispute "amicably".

"It is regrettable that there is a dispute going on amongst family members and we'd like that dispute to be resolved as amicably and as soon as possible," he said.

Mandela was rushed to hospital on June 8 with a recurring respiratory infection.

Don't 'besmirch' Mandela's name, Tutu tells feuding family

JOHANNESBURG (AFP) - South Africa's Nobel Peace Prize laureate Desmond Tutu Thursday pleaded with Nelson Mandela's family not to "besmirch" his name after they engaged in a public spat fuelled by a legal dispute over a burial site.

The family of the global icon has been involved in a bitter legal squabble over the reburial of Mandela's three children whose remains were exhumed from a family graveyard in Qunu in 2011 and reburied in Mvezo.

[caption id="attachment_353458" align="alignnone" width="412"]*Archbishop Desmond Tutu  (I) with ‘son’ *Archbishop Desmond Tutu (I) with ‘son’[/caption]

The remains were dug out by Mandela's oldest grandson Mandla, without the family's approval.

On Thursday the remains were reburied in Qunu, Mandela's childhood village, after more that a dozen family members led by Mandela's daughter Makaziwe, applied for an urgent ruling forcing Mandla to return them.

"Please, please please may we think not only of ourselves. It's like spitting in Madiba's face," said Tutu in a statement.

In dramatic scenes on Wednesday, authorities forced open the gates to Mandla's estate to exhume the remains, following a heated legal battle.

Mandla said he had been surprised by the court order and publicly lashed out at his family, accusing Makaziwe, who is his aunt of "trying to sow division and destruction" in the family.

Tutu told the family he could not imagine the difficulty endured by the family when they were separated from the anti-apartheid icon for 27 years while he was in prison, "only to share him with the world when freedom came."

He continued; "your anguish, now, is the nation's anguish - and the world's. We want too embrace you, to support you, to shine our love for Madiba through you."

The rift comes as the 94-year-old former political prisoner, who became South Africa's first black president, lies critically ill in what is now his fourth week in hospital.

"Please may we not besmirch his name." Tutu said.

The exhumed graves belong to Mandela's children who died between 1969 and 2005, one of them is Mandla's own father Makgatho.

Mandla had stated that he had a right to determine where his father ought to be buried.

Tuesday, 2 July 2013

Court orders relocation of disputed Mandela family remains

MTHATHA - A South African court on Tuesday ordered the return of the remains of three of Nelson Mandela's children to his ancestral village, following a bitter family feud linked to the eventual burial site of the ailing anti-apartheid hero.

A judge in the southern city of Mthatha instructed Mandela's eldest grandson Mandla to transfer the remains to Qunu by 3:00 pm (1300 GMT) on Wednesday.

Mandla allegedly had the graves moved to Mvezo, about 30 kilometres (18 miles) away, without the rest of the family's consent in 2011.

Mandela, who remains critically ill in what is now his fourth week in hospital, had expressed his wish to be buried in Qunu, and his daughters want to have the children's remains transferred so they can be together.

[caption id="attachment_398100" align="alignnone" width="412"]Nelson Mandela Nelson Mandela[/caption]

Previously the grandson has argued that Mandela should be buried at his birthplace Mvezo, where Mandla holds court as clan chief.

The court order was issued in response to a request by 16 relatives of the revered leader.

"I now rule that the respondent complies with the order to return the remains by 3:00 pm on Wednesday," said Judge Lusindiso Pakade.

The remains belonged to Mandela's eldest son Thembekile who died in 1969, his nine-month-old infant Makaziwe who passed away in 1948, and Mandla's own father Magkatho who died in 2005.

Monday, 1 July 2013

Mandela family tries to end gravesite row

MTHATHA  (AFP) - Lawyers for Nelson Mandela's relatives met Monday to try to resolve a bitter family feud over the eventual burial site of the critically ill anti-apartheid hero.

Legal teams met all day in the southern city of Mthatha after 16 relatives last week asked a court to order the return of the remains of three of Mandela's children to his ancestral village Qunu, a family lawyer said.

His eldest grandson Mandla allegedly had the graves moved to Mvezo, about 30 kilometres (18 miles) away, without the rest of the family's consent in 2011.

[caption id="attachment_279534" align="alignnone" width="412"]File photo: Nelson Mandela File photo: Nelson Mandela[/caption]

Mandla is expected to file his answering papers on Tuesday and "then we will decide how to move forward," the 16 relatives' lawyer Sandla Sigadla told journalists after the talks.

Mandela, who remains critically ill in what is now his fourth week in hospital, had expressed his wish to be buried in Qunu, and his daughters want to have the children's remains transferred so they can be together.

Previously the grandson has argued that Mandela should be buried at his birthplace Mvezo, where Mandla holds court as clan chief.

On Sunday Mandla said he was regrettably "compelled to go to court" and respond to the relatives' legal challenge.

His spokesman Freddy Pilusa told AFP on Monday that Mandla "has no issues with the repatriation of any of those remains".

"But obviously it has to be done by those people who have the authority to do so," he added.

"Those things would have been decided in the family. But now they're not in the family. They're in the court."

The hastily removed remains belonged to Mandela's eldest son Thembekile who died in 1969, his nine-month-old infant Makaziwe who passed away in 1948, and Mandla's own father Magkatho who died in 2005.

The AbaThembu kingdom, to which the Mandela clan belongs, has weighed in on the dispute and called a meeting with other royal families on July 8 "to bring the necessary harmony".

Mandela's parents are buried at the family gravesite in Qunu, about 500 meters (yards) from Mandela's home, where security was stepped up on Monday according to an AFP photographer.

Mandela has three surviving children, and a host of grandchildren and great-grandchildren.