The office of South Africa’s president says former leader Nelson Mandela remains in critical but stable condition in a hospital, but is continuing to show improvement. …read more
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The office of South Africa’s president says former leader Nelson Mandela remains in critical but stable condition in a hospital, but is continuing to show improvement. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News
A legal case brought by members of Nelson Mandela’s family against several of his longtime associates has been delayed. …read more
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A South African judge postponed a court battle over control of Nelson Mandela’s companies Monday, after a lawyer for his daughters withdrew from the case. …read more
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A dispute within the family of Nelson Mandela has come under new scrutiny after a South African university law clinic said it gave free legal aid to a group of the former president’s relatives on the grounds that some are poor. …read more
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The Toronto International Film Festival, which opens in September, will showcase movies about the origins of WikiLeaks, the rise of Nelson Mandela, and slavery in America, organizers announced Tuesday. …read more
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The office of the South African president says Nelson Mandela has made a “sustained improvement” although he remains in a critical condition. …read more
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The office of the South African president says Nelson Mandela has made a “sustained improvement” although he remains in a critical condition.
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News
South African peace icon Nelson Mandela is “steadily improving” six weeks after he was admitted to hospital with a recurring lung infection, his grandson said Monday. …read more
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Global icon Nelson Mandela who celebrated his 95th birthday this week remained in hospital on Saturday, six weeks after he was admitted for treatment for a lung illness. …read more
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Archbishop Desmond Tutu visits Nelson Mandela in hospital and says the ailing former president is “peaceful”after marking his 95th birthday.
Retired Anglican archbishop Tutu said Mandela was asleep when he visited the Pretoria hospital room. Tutu said he held Mandela’s hand.
Mandela has been hospitalized since June 8 with a recurring lung infection and is in critical but stable condition. Mandela family members said he has made “remarkable progress” in recent days, after fears that he was close to death. Mandela remains on a breathing ventilator.
Thousands of South Africans and others around the world celebrated Mandela’s birthday Thursday by working on community service projects. Tutu visited a school in Cape Town on Thursday to honor Mandela’s birthday.
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By The Huffington Post News Editors
“Shall we begin?” Idris Elba as Nelson Mandela asks in the first trailer for “Mandela: Long Walk To Freedom.” As it turns out, marketing for the Weinstein Company release already began last week, when an international teaser for the Oscar hopeful debuted online. That clip showed precious little in the way of Elba, though it did feature his uncanny vocal impersonation of the South African leader; the “Mandela: Long Walk To Freedom” trailer that debuted on Thursday provides interested parties a whole lot more in the way of Elba and the film’s story.
Based on an original screenplay by William Nicholson and directed by Justin Chadwick, “Mandela: Long Walk To Freedom” focuses on Mandela’s younger days. “Public Enemy No. 1,” “Hunted By Police,” “Feared By The Government” read title cards in the beginning of the clip, before words like “Liberator” and “Revolutionary” flash across the screen. (“The Social Network” trailer still has an influence on modern movie marketing, it seems.)
For his part, Elba looks strong. He’s been mentioned as a possible Best Actor contender, and this trailer does nothing to deter that excitement.
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post
The world is celebrating Nelson Mandela Day with acts of community service and messages of goodwill to the former South African president who remains hospitalized on his 95th birthday. Here are some of the international events:
UNITED NATIONS: The U.N. hosted an informal General Assembly in honor of Mandela with former United States President Bill Clinton and co-prisoner and Mandela friend Andrew Mlangeni scheduled to speak. U.N. staff also helped to rebuild homes in Long Island destroyed by Hurricane Sandy.
WASHINGTON: The Congressional Black Caucus celebrated the life and legacy of Mandela at the Emancipation Hall in the U.S. Capitol Visitor Center. House Speaker John Boehner and South Africa’s ambassador to the United States Ebrahim Rasool were among guests slated to speak at the ceremony.
NEW YORK: The Tribeca Film Institute partnered with the Nelson Mandela Foundation to commemorate Mandela Day with a video display in Times Square and a meeting in Duffy Square. A picture of a Mandela portrait by South African artist Paul Blomkamp with the words “Happy 95th Birthday Madiba!” was featured on a Times Square monitor throughout the day.
TORONTO: A community celebration featuring live music and family activities was at the Nelson Mandela Park Public School.
PARIS: The South African embassy in Paris hosts its annual Nelson Mandela Day drive to collect clothes, toys and non-perishable food items for charity. The embassy accepts donations until Aug. 31. The Hotel de Ville hosts a free exhibition, “Nelson Mandela: from Prisoner to President,” where visitors can learn about Mandela’s journey through films, photographs and sculptures. The exhibition will run through July 6.
ROME: An exhibit about Mandela’s life at an anti-racism center was visited by South Africa’s ambassador to Italy, Nomatemba Tambo.
INTERNATIONAL SPACE STATION: Three astronauts from the International Space Station honored Mandela in a video message that included words from Desmond Tutu, the Dalai Lama and Bill and Hillary Clinton, among others.
“Nelson Mandela is the symbol of what humankind must strive for: Peace, brotherhood and a common goal to better every life on this planet. Our work here on the International Space Station mirrors exactly what Mr. Mandela spent his life trying to accomplish,” astronaut Karen Nyberg said for the group.
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Wandoo Makurdi …read more
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By The Huffington Post News Editors
WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama and first lady Michelle Obama say the world can honor Nelson Mandela by heeding his example and serving others.
The Obamas are sending their wishes and prayers to the former South African leader on his 95th birthday. Mandela is critically ill in the hospital, although he’s said to be improving and could be discharged soon.
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post
South Africa’s president says Nelson Mandela’s health continues to improve as he marks his 95th birthday.
A statement from President Jacob Zuma’s office Thursday says, “Madiba remains in hospital in Pretoria but his doctors have confirmed that his health is steadily improving.”
Mandela’s daughter Zindzi has said her father is gaining strength and may be going home “anytime soon.”
Court documents filed by the family earlier this month had said Mandela was on life support and near death. He has been the hospital since June 8, and officials say his condition is critical but stable.
United Nations has declared Nelson Mandela International Day as a way to recognize the Nobel Prize winner’s contribution to reconciliation.
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On behalf of our family and the people of the United States, Michelle and I extend our warmest wishes and prayers to Nelson Mandela on the occasion of his 95th birthday, as well as to Graça Machel, the Mandela family, and the government and people of South Africa as they mark the fifth annual Nelson Mandela International Day. 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.
On Nelson Mandela International Day, people everywhere have the opportunity to honor Madiba through individual and collective acts of service. Through our own lives, by heeding his example, we can honor the man who showed his own people – and the world – the path to justice, equality, and freedom. May Nelson Mandela’s life of service to others and his unwavering commitment to equality, reconciliation, and human dignity continue to be a beacon for each future generation seeking a more just and prosperous world.
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Criticism of Nelson Mandela is rare in South Africa, much less so when he is lying in a hospital bed. But a few critics are still willing to break the taboo.
The 94-year-old’s opposition to apartheid and his role in negotiating a peaceful democratic transition have won him worldwide, but not, it seems, universal adoration.
Twenty years after those talks, some still believe the deal he struck with South Africa’s white rulers ensured blacks would be disenfranchised for decades to come.
Amukelani Ngobeni, a youth leader with the black consciousness party the Azanian People’s Organisation, is one such critic.
With whites still earning six times more than blacks on average, he recently demanded Mandela apologise before he dies for “selling out black people’s struggle”.
“Mandela and his friends… could not wait to occupy the global political space at the expense of the struggle for complete political, social and economic emancipation,” he said.
The similarly minded Pan Africanist Congress’s youth spokesman Sello Tladi also accused Mandela of being a “sell out.”
But his party quickly distanced itself from the “reckless” statement made by “cranks” in its youth brigade.
Such back-peddling normally follows anti-Mandela comments as quickly as the public backlash.
In 2010, Mandela’s ex-wife Winnie, who he separated from two years after his release from prison in 1990, let loose in an apparent unguarded moment.
“Mandela let us down. He agreed to a bad deal for the blacks,” she was quoted as saying.
“Economically, we are still on the outside,” she added, according to the article by Nadira Naipaul, wife of Nobel literature laureate V.S. Naipaul.
In the face of public outcry Winnie Mandela denied ever giving the Naipaul interview, and local media speculated she may have let slip in a private visit from the literary couple.
While Mandela was long criticised for his support for violent resistance to apartheid, he has also come in for criticism for his role as president from 1994 to 1999.
Mandela — already a septuagenarian when he took office — had expressed doubts about running the country he fought to create.
But while he managed to work with his former white jailers to “avoid a bloody civil war” he was not hands-on in the day-to-day running of the nation.
During his administration, biographer Anthony Sampson later noted, then deputy president Thabo Mbeki “was more decisively running the country as Mandela became increasingly aloof from day-to-day government.”
He behaved “more like a constitutional monarch than an executive president.”
Still, in Johannesburg’s impoverished township of Alexandra, few are willing to criticise a man who is now breathing with the help of life support machines.
Only a highway separates the area from upmarket suburb Sandton, home to Africa’s largest stock exchange.
“There are small groups saying he sold us out, but they are a very small minority,” said 22-year-old Khetha, a trainee technician.
“He did his work,” he said, adding that “blacks still don’t have economic freedom, whites are more advantaged. If you compare the life of people from Sandton with those of Alex, it’s obvious.”
Others also temper their criticism.
“Even if he has done some things wrong, we don’t …read more
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By Rajeev Peshawaria, Contributor What do Nelson Mandela, Steve Jobs, John Lennon and the Beatles, Mahatma Gandhi, Howard Schultz, Abraham Lincoln, Michelle Kwan, Thomas Edison, Beethoven, Steven Spielberg, Marilyn Monroe, Walt Disney, Soichiro Honda, Charles Darwin and Michael Jordan have in common? …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest
A former president of South Africa says he expects Nelson Mandela to soon be discharged from the hospital to recuperate at home. Thabo Mbeki was speaking at a memorial service for another ANC leader when he said that he was “quite certain” Mandela would be going home, reports South Africa’s… …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Newser – Home
A former president of South Africa says he expects Nelson Mandela to soon be discharged from the hospital to recuperate at home.
South Africa’s Eyewitness News reported on Sunday that Thabo Mbeki was speaking at a memorial service Saturday when he predicted that Mandela would be going home.
Mandela has been hospitalized for more than five weeks for a recurring lung infection, sparking an outpouring of support in South Africa and internationally. Friends who have visited him say he is on life support in the form of mechanical ventilation. The most recent official update on his health said Mandela was in critical but stable condition.
The anti-apartheid hero spent 27 years in prison before becoming South Africa’s first black president in 1994. He turns 95 on Thursday.
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News
A former president of South Africa says he expects Nelson Mandela to soon be discharged from the hospital to recuperate at home.
South Africa’s Eyewitness News reported on Sunday that Thabo Mbeki was speaking at a memorial service Saturday when he predicted that Mandela would be going home.
Mandela has been hospitalized for more than five weeks for a recurring lung infection, sparking an outpouring of support in South Africa and internationally. Friends who have visited him say he is on life support in the form of mechanical ventilation. The most recent official update on his health said Mandela was in critical but stable condition.
The anti-apartheid hero spent 27 years in prison before becoming South Africa’s first black president in 1994. He turns 95 on Thursday.
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News