Mandela on life support, Zuma cancels foreign trip

Mandela on life support, Zuma cancels foreign trip

JOHANNESBURG - Reuters

A man prays as he pays his respects outside the Medi-Clinic Heart Hospital, where ailing former South African President Nelson Mandela is being treated, in Pretoria June 27, 2013. REUTERS Photo

Nelson Mandela is on life support, unable to breathe on his own, an elder in the South African icon's clan said Wednesday, all but extinguishing hopes for the Anti-apartheid hero's recovery.
 
"Yes, he is using machines to breathe," Napilisi Mandela told AFP after visit the much-loved 94 year old's bedside. "It is bad, but what can we do," added the elder who usually presides over family rituals and meetings.
 
President Jacob Zuma late Wednesday abruptly cancelled a trip to neighbouring Mozambique after he too visited Mandela's Pretoria hospital, where he "found him to be still in a critical condition." It is the first time Zuma has scrapped a public engagement since Mandela was hospitalised nearly three weeks ago.
 
"President Zuma was briefed by the doctors who are still doing everything they can to ensure his well-being," a statement from the presidency said.
 
Twenty-hours earlier Cape Town Archbishop Thabo Makgoba had visited the Mediclinic Heart Hospital to pray with wife Graca Machel "at this hard time of watching and waiting".
 
"Grant Madiba eternal healing and relief from pain and suffering," the prayer said. "Grant him, we pray...a peaceful, perfect, end." Outside the hospital emotional crowds have gathered to hold a candlelight vigil, to offer their own prayers and remember the life of one of the last remaining giants of 20th century history.
 
Supporters sang hymns for the father of South African democracy and the architect of remarkable transition from almost half a century of white minority rule to landmark multiracial elections.
 
"We have been so united -- blacks and whites together. That's the thought of Mandela in us," said Lerato Boulares, 35.
 
With his life seemingly slipping away, messages of support for the former president blanketed a wall outside the hospital, including a poster bearing one of his most memorable quotes: "It only seems impossible until it's done".
 
Mandela's lung troubles date from his 27 years locked up on the notorious Robben Island and in other apartheid prisons.
 
Elders from Mandela's Thembu clan visited the country's first black president as his "Rainbow Nation" comes to terms with the increasing frailty of the man fondly known by his clan name Madiba.
 
A traditional chief, who is also distant nephew of the former statesman, chief Mfundo Mtirara, confirmed to AFP he visited Mandela on Wednesday, but refused to give details.
 
A row has reportedly broken out between family members over whether to move the graves of Mandela's three children to his childhood village where he is expected to be laid to rest, with grandson Mandla Mandela said to have stormed out of the meeting in anger.
 
Earlier Wednesday Zuma led delegates at a union conference in a rousing song evoking Mandela's role as a moral compass and leader of the struggle for freedom.
 
The South African president said that Mandela had spent his life "in dedication to humanity".
 
Meanwhile messages of goodwill flooded in from overseas.
 
In only her fifth ever tweet, Hillary Clinton offered "love and prayers to our great friend, Madiba, his family and his nation during this difficult time." The White House has also sent its wishes but could not yet say whether his ill health would affect a planned visit by US President Barack Obama to South Africa from Friday as part of a tour of Africa.
 
Mandela's fragile state of health has sparked speculation that the tour could be halted, or radically changed, if the anti-apartheid icon passes away while Obama is on the continent.
 
South Africa's foreign minister Maite Nkoana Mashabane said that while Obama would have loved to see Mandela, a meeting with the former South African leader would be impossible.
 
Mandela -- whose 95th birthday is on July 18 -- has been hospitalised four times since December, mostly for a recurring lung infection dating back to his time in jail for sabotage against the apartheid government.
 
The world watched as the man once branded a terrorist by the United States and Britain raised his fist as he walked free from prison near Cape Town in 1990.
 
Mandela went on to negotiate an end to white minority rule and won South Africa's first fully democratic elections in 1994.
 
He forged a path of racial reconciliation during his single term as president, before taking up a new role as a roving elder statesman and leading AIDS campaigner.
 
He stepped back from public life in 2004 and has not been seen in public since the football World Cup finals in South Africa in 2010.
 
With his health now fading, Mandela's supporters are starting to show signs of resignation -- while preparing to celebrate his legacy.
 
"He's now (nearly) 95 years old so we don't have to worry about him,' 40-year-old Jauffre Basube said. "I think he's done what he's supposed to do."