WASHINGTON (AFP) – The White House said Sunday its thoughts and
prayers were with Nelson Mandela after hearing he was in critical
condition, as President Barack Obama prepares to visit South Africa.
“We have seen the latest reports from the South African government
that former president Mandela is in critical condition,” National
Security Council spokeswoman Caitlin Hayden said.
“Our thoughts and prayers are with him, his family and the people of South Africa.”
Obama leaves Wednesday on a tour of Africa that will take him to
Senegal, South Africa and Tanzania, but he has said he will defer to
Mandela’s family regarding any meeting with the anti-apartheid icon.
The possibility of a meeting between the first black presidents of
both South Africa and the United States has
been hotly anticipated for
years.
But the declining health of Mandela, 94, who has been fighting a lung
infection, and Obama’s failure to visit South Africa until his second
term, have left the prospect in doubt.
Obama will stay overnight in Johannesburg and Cape Town during his
trip, and plans to visit Robben Island, where Mandela spent 18 of his 27
years in prison.
Obama met Mandela soon after he was elected a US senator in 2005,
when the former South African president was visiting Washington, and the
two have spoken several times since on the telephone.
Obama’s wife, Michelle, was able to visit to Mandela during her trip
to Africa two years ago, and she said it was the most moving moment of
her visit.
Obama will leave Washington on Wednesday for the three-nation tour
meant to emphasize economic potential and democratic development.
He will not, however, be visiting Kenya, which was the homeland of his late father and where he still has living relatives.
The fact that Kenya’s recently elected President Uhuru Kenyatta is
facing trial at the Hague for allegedly orchestrating deadly violence in
2007 and 2008 following previous polls had stymied plans for a possible
visit.
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