South Africa: Mandela discharged from the hospital
JOHANNESBURG (AP) -- Former President Nelson Mandela was discharged from a hospital on Saturday following treatment for pneumonia, the presidency said in news that cheered South Africans who had waited tensely for health updates on a beloved national figure.
FILE - In this June 17, 2010 file photo, former South African President Nelson Mandela leaves the chapel after attending the funeral of his great-granddaughter Zenani Mandela in Johannesburg, South Africa. The South African presidency says Mandela has been discharged, Saturday, April 6, 2013, from a hospital after an improvement in his condition. Officials say he was treated for pneumonia. |
JOHANNESBURG (AP) -- Former President Nelson Mandela was discharged from a hospital on Saturday following treatment for pneumonia, the presidency said in news that cheered South Africans who had waited tensely for health updates on a beloved national figure.
Mandela,
the anti-apartheid leader who spent 27 years in prison for opposing
white racist rule, was robust during his decades as a public figure,
endowed with charisma, a powerful memory and an extraordinary talent for
articulating the aspirations of his people and winning over many of
those who opposed him. In recent years, however, 94-year-old Mandela
became more frail and last made a public appearance at the 2010 World
Cup soccer tournament, where he didn't deliver an address and was
bundled against the cold in a stadium full of fans.
South
Africans hold the former leader dear as a symbol of sacrifice and
reconciliation stemming from his pivotal role in steering South Africa
from the apartheid era and into democratic elections in 1994, at a time
of great hope but also tension and uncertainty. The new South Africa,
beset by economic inequality, crime and corruption, has not lived up to
the soaring expectations of its people, but they still see hope through
their icon, Mandela.
Primrose Mashoma, a South African, said she wished that Mandela would live, basically, forever.
"I wish him to stay maybe a hundred more years," she said.
A
statement from the office of President Jacob Zuma said there had been
"a sustained and gradual improvement" in the condition of Mandela, who
was admitted to a hospital on the night of March 27.
"The former President will now receive home-based high care," the statement said.
Mandela
had received similar treatment at his home in Johannesburg after a stay
at a hospital in nearby Pretoria in December, when he was treated for a
lung infection and had a procedure to remove gallstones.
Earlier in
March, the anti-apartheid leader was hospitalized overnight for what
authorities said was a successful scheduled medical test.
During Mandela's latest hospitalization, doctors drained fluid from his lung area, making it easier for him to breathe.
On
Saturday afternoon, shortly after the presidential statement on
Mandela's discharge, a military ambulance was seen entering his home in
the Johannesburg neighborhood of Houghton. In recent years, Mandela had
been spending more time in Qunu, the rural area in Eastern Cape province
where he grew up. But his delicate condition required that he be moved
to South Africa's biggest city.
Many South
Africans refer affectionately to Mandela by his clan name, Madiba.
Buildings, squares, and other places have been named after him, and his
image adorns statues and artwork around the country. The central bank
issued new banknotes last year that show his smiling face.
"I'm
really happy about Madiba coming out," said student Anele Gcolotela,
using Mandela's clan name, a term of affection. "I think it's been too
long now."
After Mandela's release from prison
in 1990, he was widely credited with averting even greater bloodshed by
helping the country in the transition to democratic rule, negotiating
with the guardians of the same system that had deprived him of freedom
for decades. He became South Africa's first black president in 1994
after elections were held, bringing an end to apartheid.
The
Nobel Peace Prize laureate has been particularly vulnerable to
respiratory problems since contracting tuberculosis during his 27-year
imprisonment under apartheid. Most of those years were spent on Robben
Island, a forbidding outpost off the coast of Cape Town where Mandela
and other prisoners spent part of the time toiling in a stone quarry.
The
elderly are especially vulnerable to pneumonia, which can be fatal. Its
symptoms include fever, chills, a cough, chest pain and shortness of
breath. Many germs cause pneumonia.
South African officials have said doctors were acting with extreme caution because of Mandela's advanced age.
In
Saturday's statement, Zuma thanked the medical team and hospital staff
that looked after Mandela and expressed gratitude for South Africans and
people around the world who had shown support for Mandela. The South
African government has sought to balance efforts to satisfy wide public
interest in Mandela's condition with an intense campaign to preserve the
privacy of an ailing figure who already has his place in history.
The
African National Congress, the ruling party that led the struggle
against apartheid and has held power since its demise, expressed its
"happiness" at the discharge of its former leader from the hospital.
"We
acknowledge the important role played by President Zuma and his office
to keep the nation, the continent and the world informed about progress
made on his treatment on a regular basis," the party said in a
statement.