
As Nelson Mandela remained in critical
condition in hospital yesterday, a family feud over where the
94-year-old former president should be buried went to court, according
to South Africa’s national broadcaster.
Mandela’s oldest daughter, Makaziwe, and
15 other family members have pressed a court application to get
Mandela’s grandson to return the bodies of three of Mandela’s children
to their original graves in the eastern rural village of Qunu, according
to the SABC.
The grandson, Mandla Mandela,
acknowledges having reburied the three bodies 20 kilometres away in the
Mvezo village, where he plans to create a Mandela shrine, hotel and
soccer stadium, according to the South African Press Association.
Grandson Mandla Mandela has until today to respond to the court filing, reports said.
The anti-apartheid leader built his
retirement home in Qunu and was living there until his repeated
hospitalizations which started at the end of last year. Nelson Mandela
attended the burial of his son at the family plot in Qunu in 2005, and
it was widely expected that the leader himself will be buried there.
But his grandson exhumed the bodies of
Mandela’s three children and moved them to nearby Mvezo, which is the
former president’s birthplace and where the grandson holds authority as
chief.
Eldest daughter Makaziwe and other
Mandela family members want the family bodies returned to their original
graves in Qunu, according to the reports.
The family court struggle came as Mandela’s ex-wife said that he had improved in recent days, but remained critical.
Winnie Madikizela-Mandela gave the update yesterday while speaking to journalists outside Mandela’s former home in Soweto.
“I’m not a doctor but I can say that
from what he was a few days ago there is great improvement,” said
Madikizela-Mandela, who is a member of South Africa’s Parliament.
Madikizela-Mandela pleaded with the media to “understand the sensitivities and the feeling of the family.”
His daughter Makaziwe Mandela was among
the family members who arrived at the Pretoria hospital yesterday. The
ministers of health and defence also visited, the South African Press
Association reported.
Outside the Pretoria hospital yesterday,
a man flying a drone-like object with a camera attached was led away by
several policemen, adding to an already heightened atmosphere where
well-wishers continue to gather to pray for Mandela.
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