Mandela making ‘slow but steady’ improvement

Daughter says 95-year-old former president is ‘able to sit up for minutes at a time’

Supporters of former South African president Nelson Mandela hold a flag depicting the former South African leader as they wait to hear news of his condition outside the Heart Hospital where Mandela is being treated for a lung infection. Photograph: Getty Images
Supporters of former South African president Nelson Mandela hold a flag depicting the former South African leader as they wait to hear news of his condition outside the Heart Hospital where Mandela is being treated for a lung infection. Photograph: Getty Images

Former South African president Nelson Mandela’s health is slowly recovering but he remains in a critical condition, the government said today, in its first update on his health in nearly two weeks.

The 95-year-old anti-apartheid leader has been in a Pretoria hospital for two months for treatment of a recurrent lung infection.

“The former president is making a slow but steady improvement,” South Africa’s presidency said in a statement, adding Mr Mandela still remained in a critical condition.

Mr Mandela’s youngest daughter told state broadcaster SABC on Friday that her father’s health was improving daily and he was able to sit up for minutes at a time.

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Mr Mandela became South Africa’s first democratically elected president in all-race elections in 1994 that marked the end of the apartheid system.

He spent 27 years in prison under white minority rule, including 18 years at the notorious Robben Island penal colony. His lung infection dates back to his time on the windswept island, where he and other prisoners were forced to work in a limestone quarry.

Reuters