Nelson Mandela, who died on Thursday, once the world's most
famous political prisoner, emerged from a 27-year jail term in 1990 to
lead South Africa from apartheid to democracy.
President Jacob Zuma announced his death on the public broadcaster
just before midnight. "He passed on peacefully in the company of his
family around 20.50pm on December 5. He is now resting, he is now at
peace. Our nation has lost its greatest son." "Fellow South Africans,
Nelson Mandela brought us together and it is together that we bid him
farewell."
His charisma, generosity of spirit, and an unwavering commitment to
the well-being of his fellow humans, earned him love and acclaim across
the globe.
It also earned him the Nobel Peace Prize in 1993. Even
after he stepped down from the presidency in 1999, he continued as an
elder statesman to champion the cause of reconciliation, peace and human
rights, speaking out strongly on issues including Aids and armed
conflict. Nelson Rolihlahla Dalibungha Mandela was born in the Transkei
on July 18, 1918, and trained as a lawyer. He became a key figure in the
African National Congress (ANC) and its decision in 1955 to embark on
organised resistance to the newly-elected National Party in the form of
the Defiance Campaign.
Going underground after the ANC was banned in 1960, he was arrested
and sentenced in 1964 to life imprisonment for plotting the overthrow of
the government.
He served the bulk of his time on Robben Island,
where he became a symbol of apartheid injustice. Freed by the reformist
head of state FW de Klerk in 1990, he was elected president of the ANC
the following year. In May 1994 he was inaugurated president of South
Africa by a new non-racial Parliament.
He formally retired from
public life in June 2004, just short of his 86th birthday, and only
weeks after playing a major role in helping secure the 2010 soccer World
Cup for South Africa.
However he continued to lend support to causes such as the 46664 anti-Aids campaign, and to speak out against poverty.
On
his 80th birthday in 1998 he married Graca Machel, widow of former
Mozambican president Samora Machel. In his later years Mandela was
increasingly frail. He made his last public appearance at the closing
ceremony of the World Cup.
In early 2011, fears for his health grew
when he battled a serious respiratory infection that would recur in
coming years. When he turned 93 a few months later, he retired to his
country home in the Eastern Cape.
In December 2012 he was treated again for a lung infection in
hospital then was admitted again on March 27, 2013 to be treated for
pneumonia.
After his discharge, the public broadcaster televised
footage of him on April 27, looking remote, but comfortable in an easy
chair at home.
In the early hours of June 8, Mandela was again taken to hospital.
A
news report that his ambulance had broken down on the road there was
confirmed by the presidency which hastened to add that there was no
danger to his health at the time because he had seven doctors, nurses,
and a fully equipped ICU in his convoy.
On Sunday night, June 23, the presidency said his condition had
changed to critical, and Zuma asked for prayers of support for him, his
family, and his medical team.
On Monday 24, family and key government
ministers flew into Mthatha for a private meeting in Qunu. The
presidency issued another statement, to say Mandela remained
critical. On Wednesday, June 26, the nation held its breath after
President Jacob Zuma cancelled a trip to neighbouring Maputo at short
notice but the next day he reported that Mandela's condition had
stabilised overnight.
Mandela had six children by two previous marriages, including two daughters with Winnie Madikizela-Mandela.
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