Nelson Mandelas daughter to NBC News I cant stress enough what a fighter ...

Bookmark and Share

Ben Curtis / AP

Zindzi Mandela right receives a hug from an unidentified woman as she arrives Wednesday at the Pretoria hospital where he father is being treated.

PRETORIA Nelson Mandela is not going to go anywhere anytime soon one of the anti apartheid icon's daughters told NBC News in an exclusive interview on Thursday.

Speaking to Special Correspondent Charlayne Hunter Gault Zindzi Mandela said her father was very comfortable and responding as he battles a lung infection at a Pretoria hospital.

NBC's Keir Simmons shares the latest of the condition of the South African president.

His whole legacy is about fighting she said. I can't stress enough what a fighter he is. He s a strong man. He's about resilience.

When asked whether the family would welcome a visit by President Barack Obama who is due to visit South Africa this weekend Mandela said she wasn't aware of any formal request but added that decision would be left with doctors treating the Nobel Peace Prize laureate.

She described Mandela's condition as typical for a 94 year old man whose health is frail.

He is with us Mandela added.

Meanwhile Mandela's eldest daughter said he appeared to be able to hear family members.

Speaking to SABC radio Makaziwe Mandela said I won't lie it doesn't look good. But as I say if we speak to him he responds and tries to open his eyes. He's still there. He might be waning off but he's still there.

Other members of the former South African president's family thanked well wishers around the world for their support.

President Barrack Obama has said in the last hour that his thoughts and prayers are with Nelson Mandela's family. They have been at the 94 year old's bedside in hospital in Pretoria this morning where he is still in a critical condition. His granddaughter though did tell reporters awaiting news outside the hospital that he is stable. ITV's Neil Connery reports.

Sometimes it is very hard for all of us in the family said Swati Dlamini one of Mandela s 17 grandchildren. We just appreciate that he s loved.

Relatives collected flowers from outside the hospital on Thursday. A choir prayed and sang outside the building as other people arrived to deliver bouquets and messages of support for the 94 year old. By late afternoon a crowd of about 1 000 people had gathered nearby.

Earlier one family member described Mandela's condition as stable. However presidential spokesman Mac Maharaj told reporters that the condition remained critical.

Mandela has already spent 20 days in the hospital his fourth hospitalization in six months.

Earlier President Jacob Zuma canceled a trip to Mozambique in an indication of heightened concern about Mandela who is widely regarded as the father of the nation and whose health deteriorated last weekend.

In a statement Zuma said that Mandela was much better Thursday than he had been the previous night.

The medical team continues to do a sterling job he added.

NBC News' Rohit Kachroo and Reuters contributed to this report.

/

View images of civil rights leader Nelson Mandela who went from anti apartheid activist to prisoner to South Africa's first black president.

Launch slideshow

Related

Archbishop prays for 'peaceful perfect end' for Mandela Chronicling post apartheid S. Africa through one township's story All white town fights to preserve segregation in Mandela's 'Rainbow Nation'

This story was originally published on Thu Jun 27 2013 6 30 AM EDT

Articles Source here

{ 0 comments... Views All / Send Comment! }

Post a Comment