Anti-apartheid icon Nelson Mandela was on life support in a Pretoria
hospital late Wednesday, said an official who had been briefed in detail
on his condition.
Considered the founding father of South
Africa's democracy, Mandela, 94, has been hospitalized since June 8 for a
recurring lung infection.
Authorities have described his
condition as critical since Sunday, and President Jacob Zuma said
earlier Wednesday that Mandela's condition remained unchanged, South
Africa's national news agency reported. In a statement issued
late Tuesday, the government said Mandela's doctors "continue to do
their best to ensure his recovery, well-being and comfort."
As
the nation remained on edge, police barricaded the street leading to the
hospital's main entrance. Well-wishers hung balloons, stuffed animals
and messages of support along the wall outside his Pretoria hospital.
Crowds hovering nearby sang "Where is Mandela?"
"We
need you!," one sign read. "We love you tata, get well soon!" said
another, referring to Mandela by the Xhosa word for father. Someone else
left a stone upon which was written, "Sending you light and love."
Several members of the family came out to collect some of those items Wednesday.
"He's going to feel a lot better when he sees these signs," said David Manaway, Mandela's grandson-in-law.
Why
Mandela has six names Mandela's former physician and the nation's
ex-surgeon general, Dr. Vejay Ramlakan, also visited the hospital
Wednesday, said the national news agency, South African Press
Association.
Mandela became an international figure while
enduring 27 years in prison for fighting against apartheid, the
country's system of racial segregation. He was elected the nation's
first black president in 1994, four years after he was freed.
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