PRETORIA (Reuters) - Nelson Mandela's eldest daughter lambasted foreign
media "vultures" for violating her father's privacy as he lay critically
ill in hospital, and said the former South African president was still
clinging to life on Thursday. Makaziwe Mandela's
outburst came as anxiety increased over the faltering health of the
94-year-old anti-apartheid hero, admired across the world as a symbol of
resistance against injustice and oppression and then of racial
reconciliation.
President Jacob Zuma canceled a
scheduled trip to neighboring Mozambique on Thursday because of the
gravity of Mandela's condition, but a mid-afternoon official update said
his health had improved.
"He is much better today
than he was when I saw him last night. The medical team continues to do a
sterling job," Zuma said in a statement. Mandela remained critical but
was now "stable", it added.
Makaziwe was sanguine
about her father's chances after nearly three weeks of treatment in a
Pretoria hospital for a lung infection.
"I won't
lie, it doesn't look good," she told state broadcaster SABC. "But as I
say, if we speak to him, he responds and tries to open his eyes. He's
still there".
Having run the gauntlet of camera
crews and reporters at the hospital, Makaziwe criticized what she said
was the "bad taste" of the foreign media and intrusion into the family's
privacy.
"There's sort of a racist element with many of the foreign media, where they just cross boundaries," she said.
"It's truly like vultures waiting when the lion has
devoured the buffalo, waiting there for the last of the carcass. That's
the image we have as a family."
Her criticism
followed several sharp rebukes from Zuma's office of some foreign media
reports that have given alarming details of Mandela's condition.
Spokesman Mac Maharaj declined to comment on the latest
report by a major U.S. TV news network that Madiba, as he is
affectionately known, is on life support. He said this was part of
Mandela's confidential relationship with his doctors.
Makaziwe compared the massive media attention on Mandela, who has
been in and out of hospital in the last few months with the recurring
lung infection, with the coverage of the death in April of former
British prime minister Margaret Thatcher.
"We don't
mind the interest but I just feel it has gone overboard. When Margaret
Thatcher was sick in hospital, I didn't see this kind of media frenzy
around Margaret Thatcher," she said. "It is only God who knows when the
time to go is."
OBAMA: MANDELA A "PERSONAL HERO"
Mandela's fourth hospitalization in six months has led to a
growing realization among South Africans that the man regarded as the
father of their post-apartheid "Rainbow Nation" will not be among them
forever.
"Mandela is very old and at that age, life
is not good. I just pray that God takes him this time. He must go. He
must rest," said Ida Mashego, a 60-year-old office cleaner in
Johannesburg's Sandton financial district.
In
Pretoria and the sprawling Johannesburg township of Soweto, the ruling
African National Congress bussed in hundreds of supporters to start a
nocturnal vigil for Mandela, the 101-year-old liberation movement's most
famous leader.
U.S. President Barack Obama, who is
due to visit South Africa this weekend, said his thoughts and prayers
were with the Mandela family and South Africa's 53 million people.
Speaking in Senegal, his first stop on a three-nation
African tour, Obama said Mandela was a "personal hero". "Even if he
passes on, his legacy will linger on," he said.
Pretoria dismissed concerns about disruptions to Obama's schedule,
saying it was "getting ready" to welcome the United States' first black
president to the historic Union Buildings, where Mandela became South
Africa's first black president 19 years ago.
Mandela is revered for his lifetime of opposition to the system of
race-based apartheid rule imposed by the white minority government that
sentenced him to 27 years in jail, more than half of them on the
notorious Robben Island.
He is also respected for
the way he preached reconciliation after the 1994 transition to
multi-racial democracy following three centuries of white domination.
Mandela stepped down in 1999 after one five-year term in
office. Since then he has played little role in public life, dividing
his time in retirement between his home in the wealthy Johannesburg
suburb of Houghton and Qunu, the village in the impoverished Eastern
Cape province where he was born.
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