Friday, September 12, 2025
spot_img

‘Steadily improving’ Mandela celebrates 95th b’day

Date:

Share post:

spot_imgspot_img

PRETORIA, Jul 18 (Reuters) Anti-apartheid leader Nelson Mandela is “steadily improving”, South Africa’s government said today as the former president celebrated his 95th birthday in hospital showered by tributes from around the world.

Thousands of South Africans led the global outpouring of support for the man regarded as the father of the multiracial ‘Rainbow Nation” established in 1994 when he was elected its first black president at the end of apartheid.

He has been receiving intensive treatment since June 8 for a recurring lung infection, his fourth stay in hospital in six months.

While many carried out volunteer work on UN-declared Nelson Mandela Day, his daughter Zindzi led government workers in singing “Happy Birthday” to the Nobel Peace Prize laureate, one of numerous celebrations across the country.

“His doctors have confirmed that his health is steadily improving,” President Jacob Zuma’s office said in a statement.

“On behalf of government and all the people of South Africa, we wish Madiba a joyous 95th birthday,” it said using Mandela’s traditional clan name.

The fragile health of Mandela, who for weeks has been in a critical condition, has served as a reminder of the mortality of the man globally admired as a symbol of struggle against injustice and of racial reconciliation.

Many in South Africa celebrated Mandela Day with 67 minutes of public service to honour the 67 years Mandela served humanity by first fighting against white-minority rule and then consolidating racial harmony when he was president.

His former wife Winnie Madikizela-Mandela called the 95th birthday “a gift to the nation”. “There are some prophets of doom who say the country will come to a standstill (when he dies),” she told. “The country will continue as it has always done. If anything, the country will solidify, come together and carry on.”

Across South Africa, office workers, students, soldiers and ordinary citizens marked Mandela Day by sprucing up orphanages, painting walls at schools and delivering food to the poor.

The United Nations declared July 18 as Nelson Mandela International Day in 2009 and will celebrate with speeches from figures such as former US President Bill Clinton.

Mandela Day will be marked in nearly 20 US cities with commemorations around Capitol Hill in Washington, DC and by volunteers handing out South African oranges in New York. “Nelson Mandela is synonymous with the reputation and the good name of this country. He is one of those iconic figures who has come to represent not only what South Africa stands for but what we as a country are trying to contribute to the world,” said Miller Matola, chief executive of Brand South Africa. (Reuters)

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

spot_imgspot_img

Related articles

Australia faces rising dementia burden with over 1 million cases by 2065

Canberra, Sep 12: More than 1 million Australians are projected to have dementia by 2065, a government report...

CM Chandrababu Naidu, Dy CM Pawan Kalyan attend VP’s oath ceremony

Amaravati, Sep 12: Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister N. Chandrababu Naidu, Deputy Chief Minister Pawan Kalyan and Governor S....

‘Wishing him a successful VP tenure’, PM Modi hails CP Radhakrishnan’s dedication to nation-building

New Delhi, Sep 12: Prime Minister Narendra Modi congratulated CP Radhakrishnan on taking oath as the 15th Vice...

Jagdeep Dhankhar attends Vice-Prez’s oath ceremony; marks his first ‘public appearance’ after exit

New Delhi, Sep 12: Chandrapuram Ponnusamy Radhakrishnan took oath as the 15th Vice President of India at a...