Former South African president Nelson Mandela's
condition deteriorated to "critical" on Sunday, the
government said, two weeks after the 94-year-old anti-apartheid
leader was admitted to hospital with a lung infection.
The
worsening of his condition is bound to concern South Africa's 53
million people, for whom Mandela remains the architect of a
peaceful transition to democracy in 1994 after three centuries of
white domination.
A
government statement said President Jacob Zuma and the
deputy leader of the ruling African National Congress (ANC),
Cyril Ramaphosa, visited Mandela in his Pretoria hospital, where
doctors said his condition had gone downhill in the last 24 hours.
Mandela,
who became South Africa's first black president after historic
all-race elections nearly two decades ago, was rushed to a Pretoria
hospital on June 8 with a recurrence of a lung infection, his fourth
hospitalisation in six months.
Until
Sunday, official communiques had described his condition as "serious
but stable" although comments last week from Mandela family
members and his presidential successor, Thabo Mbeki, suggested he was
on the mend.
Since
stepping down after one term as president, Mandela has played little
role in the public or political life of the continent's biggest and
most important economy.
His
last public appearance was waving to fans from the back of a golf
cart before the final of the soccer World Cup in Johannesburg's
Soccer City stadium in July 2010.
During
his retirement, he has divided his time between his home in the
wealthy Johannesburg suburb of Houghton, and Qunu, the village in the
impoverished Eastern Cape province where he was born.
The
public's last glimpse of him was a brief clip aired by state
television in April during a visit to his home by Zuma and other
senior ANC officials.
At
the time, the 101-year-old liberation movement, which led the fight
against white-minority rule, assured the public Mandela was "in
good shape" although the footage showed a thin and frail old man
sitting expressionless in an armchair.
"Obviously
we are very worried," ANC spokesman Jackson Mthembu told
Johannesburg station Talk Radio 702. "We are praying for him,
his family and the doctors."
No comments:
Post a Comment