Mandela |
Finally, former South African
President and anti-apartheid icon Nelson Mandela died yesterday night at his
Johannesburg home after a prolonged lung infection, President Jacob Zuma said.
Mr. Mandela, 95, known by his clan
name Madiba was South Africa’s first black president.
He emerged from 27 years in
apartheid prisons to help guide South Africa through bloodshed and turmoil to
democracy.
His death was announced by President
Zuma in a nationally televised address. President Zuma said Mandela would have
a full state funeral. He ordered flags to be flown at half mast.
He said: “Fellow South Africans, our
beloved Nelson Rohlihla Mandela, the founding president of our democratic
nation, has departed.
“Our nation has lost its greatest
son.He passed on peacefully in the comfort of his home.
“What made Nelson Mandela great was
precisely what made him human. We saw in him what we seek in ourselves,” Mr.
Zuma said.
“Fellow South Africans, Nelson
Mandela brought us together and it is together that we will bid him farewell.”
Mandela had been receiving intense
homebased medical care for a lung infection after three months in hospital.
The anti-apartheid icon rose from
rural obscurity to challenge the might of white minority government – a
struggle that gave the 20th century one of its most respected and loved
figures.
He was among the first to advocate
armed resistance to apartheid in 1960, but was quick to preach reconciliation
and forgiveness when the country’s white minority began easing its grip on
power 30 years later.
Mandela, imprisoned for nearly three
decades, was elected president in landmark all-race elections in 1994 and
retired in 1999.
He was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize
in 1993, an honor he shared with F.W. de Klerk, the white Afrikaner leader who
released from jail arguably the world’s most famous political prisoner.
As president, Mandela faced the
monumental task of forging a new nation from the deep racial injustices left
over from the apartheid era, making reconciliation the theme of his time in
office.
The hallmark of Mandela’s mission
was the Truth and Reconciliation Commission which probed apartheid crimes on
both sides of the struggle and tried to heal the country’s wounds. It also
provided a model for other countries torn by civil strife.
In 1999, Mandela handed over power
to younger leaders better equipped to manage a modern economy – a rare
voluntary departure from power cited as an example to African leaders.
In retirement, he shifted his
energies to battling South Africa’s AIDS crisis and the struggle became
personal when he lost his only surviving son to the disease in 2005.
Mandela’s last major appearance on
the global stage came in 2010 when he attended the championship match of the
soccer World Cup, where he received a thunderous ovation from the 90,000 at the
stadium in Soweto, the neighborhood in which he cut his teeth as a resistance
leader.
Charged with capital offences in the
infamous 1963 Rivonia Trial, his statement from the dock was his political
testimony.
“During my lifetime I have dedicated
myself to this struggle of the African people. I have fought against white
domination, and I have fought against black domination.
President Goodluck Jonathan has
expressed sadness over the death of former South African President, Dr. Nelson
Mandela.
In a condolence message to President
Zuma, President Jonathan conveyed the sympathy and solidarity of the Federal
Government and people of Nigeria to him and all South Africans as they mourn
Dr. Mandela.
“I write to commiserate with you,
the Government and people of South Africa and the family of Dr. Nelson Mandela
on the death of one of the greatest sons of Africa.
“Although it has come at the
advanced age of 95, Madiba’s death will create a huge vacuum that will be
difficult to fill in our continent. He will be sorely missed by all who cherish
love, peace and freedom the world over and will be eternally honoured for his
immense contribution to the dismantling of the apartheid policy, one of the
world’s most obnoxious systems whose under-pining philosophy was the deg
1 comment:
RIP Madiba...#alinko
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