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    30
    Apr
    2013
    11:10am, EDT

    ANC defends broadcast of visit with ailing Nelson Mandela

    The first pictures of Nelson Mandela since his discharge from the hospital after being treated for pneumonia have just been broadcast on South African television. NBC's Rohit Kachroo reports.

    By John Newland, Staff Writer, NBC News

    The African National Congress has gone on the defensive after being criticized for allowing a visit to ailing leader Nelson Mandela to be broadcast on national television.

    In photos and video shown on state broadcaster SABC, the recently hospitalized Mandela appears frail and wears a somewhat vacant expression as he is surrounded by President Jacob Zuma and other ANC party officials.

    While some South Africans expressed gratitude on social media for having been able to see footage of Mandela, others attacked the move as being disrespectful and politically exploitative. Zuma is expected to run for re-election next year.

    “Mandela survived 27 years in prison only to become a prisoner of the ANC marketing machine,” one Twitter user wrote in a message that had been “retweeted” more than 800 times within hours.

    “The ANC are more interested in the brand than the man, or they'd just let him live out his last days in peace,” wrote another Twitter user.

    Slideshow: Nelson Mandela: A revolutionary's life

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    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

    It was typical of the criticism being lobbed at the ANC, with many people saying Mandela looked too ill to be shown and should be left alone.

    Some people also questioned the ANC’s statements that Mandela was “in good health and good spirits,” which the party stood by on Tuesday.

    “South Africans are called upon to appreciate that [Mandela] is 94 years old; he will be frail and not as active and energetic as we all fondly remember him,” the ANC said in a statement. “There is no reason to be alarmed by the visuals of an elderly person who clearly is receiving the necessary care and attention.”

    In the video, Mandela is sitting in a chair, his legs propped on an ottoman and covered by a blanket. He is expressionless and nearly motionless as politicians and people described as his medical team laugh and smile and pose for photographs.

    Shortly afterward, Zuma appeared outside Mandela’s Johannesburg home and said he had conversed with Mandela, whom he described as being “very up and about.” He added: “We’re very happy. We think that he’s fine.”

    After the broadcast began to draw the ire of some South Africans, the ANC released a statement saying that showing Mandela was “in the public interest.”

    ”We maintain that President Mandela is a global icon,” the statement said. “As the ANC we regard him as a leader of the people and we would want to keep the world informed of his condition.”

    The party also speculated that negative reaction reflected “the fear of South Africans to accept that President Mandela is mortal and aged.”

    Mandela was discharged from a hospital on April 6 after having been treated since March 27 for pneumonia and other problems.

    The Nobel laureate and former president, who led the nation’s battle against the white-minority apartheid government, has battled health problems, especially with his lungs, for years.

    Related:

    What will happen to the 'Rainbow Nation' after Mandela?

    Mandela discharged from South African hospital

    South African president asks world to pray for Mandela

    6 comments

    Who gives a rat's a$$ about the ANC, Mandela or South Africa. MSNBC just puts this tripe here so they don't have t report on stories like Gosnell trial, Benghazi cover-up, dropping the ball on the Boston Bomber or admitting the fact that his economic policies ( his or who ever pulls the strings) is  …

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    Explore related topics: politics, south-africa, featured, anc, nelson-mandela, jacob-zuma
  • Updated
    6
    Apr
    2013
    7:43pm, EDT

    Nelson Mandela discharged from South Africa hospital

    Nelson Mandela was discharged on Saturday from the hospital where he had been undergoing treatment for pneumonia, South Africa's presidency said in a statement. NBC's Ron Allen reports.

    By Ian Johnston, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Nelson Mandela was discharged on Saturday from the hospital where he had been undergoing treatment for pneumonia, South Africa’s presidency said in a statement.

    Slideshow: Nelson Mandela: A revolutionary's life

    /

    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

    The decision to release the 94-year-old, anti-apartheid icon was taken “following a sustained and gradual improvement in his general condition,” the statement said.

    “The former President will now receive home-based high care,” it added. “President [Jacob] Zuma thanks the hard-working medical team and hospital staff for looking after Madiba so efficiently."

    The statement said Zuma also extended “his gratitude to all South Africans and friends” of the country in Africa and overseas.

    Photographers captured pictures of an ambulance that was believed to be carrying Mandela arriving at his home in Houghton, Johannesburg.


    Among a small group of well-wishers was Michelle Lewis and her daughter Kristen, who was two on Saturday. Kristen gave a small gift, a get-well message and a balloon for Mandela to a guard at the house, according to Getty Images.

    The Nobel Peace Prize winner has a history of lung problems dating back to when he contracted tuberculosis as a political prisoner. He spent 27 years in prison on Robben Island and in other jails for his attempts to overthrow the white-minority government.

    He was admitted to the hospital shortly before midnight March 27, and Zuma initially asked people to pray for him, prompting global concern for Mandela's health.

    Global figures, including President Barack Obama, sent get-well messages.

    Siphiwe Sibeko / Reuters

    An ambulance believed to be transporting Nelson Mandela arrives at his house in Houghton, South Africa, Saturday.

    A government statement issued Saturday said doctors had drained excess fluid from Mandela's lungs and that he was breathing without difficulty.

    And this week saw several updates on his condition that said he was getting better.

    Mandela became South Africa's first black president in 1994 and was hailed as a global symbol of tolerance and harmony.

    He stepped down as president in 1999 and has not been politically active for a decade.

    But he is still revered at home and abroad for leading the struggle against apartheid rule and then championing racial reconciliation while in office.

    Former South African president Nelson Mandela is at home resting after being discharged from the hospital where he was being treated for a recurring lung infection and pneumonia. NBC's Ron Allen reports.

    Related:

    Mandela hospitalized again, South Africa leader asks world to pray for him

    Mandela visited by family amid pneumonia treatment

    'Who is my Mandela?' South Africans consider icon's place in a changing world

    This story was originally published on Sat Apr 6, 2013 8:57 AM EDT

    29 comments

    It's unfortunate this communist swine isn't dead. Someday, the idiots of the world will know the truth about this murderous thug and what he's done to the great continent of Africa.

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    Explore related topics: hospital, south-africa, featured, nelson-mandela, pneumonia, jacob-zuma, updated
  • 4
    Apr
    2013
    1:49pm, EDT

    South Africa president: Mandela's recovery continues

    Slideshow: Nelson Mandela: A revolutionary's life

    /

    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

    By Ian Johnston, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Nelson Mandela’s health is continuing to get better, South Africa’s President Jacob Zuma said Thursday, after visiting the anti-apartheid icon in the hospital where he is being treated for pneumonia.

    A statement from the country’s presidency said Zuma visited Mandela and received a briefing from doctors that indicated “continuous improvement in his condition.”

    “Madiba [Mandela] is stable and we are thankful that he is responding well to treatment and that he is much better. We remain thankful for all the support to the family during this difficult time," Zuma said in the statement.

    The president also met members of Mandela’s family, who “expressed their gratitude for the support from South Africans and people from all over the world,” the statement said.

    Mandela was admitted to hospital late on Wednesday last week, when Zuma asked people to pray for him, prompting global concern for the 94-year-old’s health.

    A government statement issued Saturday said doctors had drained excess fluid from Mandela's lungs and that he was breathing without difficulty.

    It is the third health scare in four months for Mandela, who became South Africa's first black president in 1994 and was hailed as a global symbol of tolerance and harmony.

    Mandela stepped down as president in 1999 and has not been politically active for a decade.

    But he is still revered at home and abroad for leading the struggle against apartheid rule and then championing racial reconciliation while in office.

    Global figures such as U.S. President Barack Obama have sent get-well messages, and South Africans included him in Easter prayers over the weekend.

    Mandela has a history of lung problems dating back to when he contracted tuberculosis as a political prisoner. He spent 27 years in prison on Robben Island and in other jails for his attempts to overthrow the white-minority government.

    Reuters contributed to this report.

    Related:

    Mandela hospitalized again; world asked to pray for him

    Mandela visited by family amid pneumonia treatment

    'Who is my Mandela?' South Africans consider icon's place in a changing world

    3 comments

    Why this doesn't matter to me: 1 - I am not African 2 - He is 94, for Pete's sake. 3 - All of the above.

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  • 31
    Mar
    2013
    3:19pm, EDT

    Mandela has 'restful day' of recovery

    Barbara Kinney / AFP - Getty Images

    Former South African President Nelson Mandela is pictured during a visit by former US president on July 17, 2012 at his home in Qunu, Eastern Cape, on the eve of his 94th birthday.

    By Sofia Perpetua, NBCNews.com

    Nelson Mandela condition has improved, the South African government confirmed on Sunday after the 94-year-old human-rights icon and former president received treatment for pneumonia.

    “Nelson Mandela had a restful day,” the presidency of South Africa said in a statement. “His condition has improved further.”

    Mandela continues to receive treatment after he spending four days at the hospital. The South African government does not want to reveal in which hospital Mandela is receiving treatments.

    NBC's Keir Simmons reports from South Africa and has the latest regarding the health of Nelson Mandela.

    “We thank all people at home and around the world, who continue to keep ‘Mandiba’ (Mandela) and his family in their thoughts and to show their love and support in various ways,” said president Jacob Zuma, referring to the apartheid-era hero by his clan name. “We also thank foreign governments for their message of support.”

    Last December, Mandela spent 18 days at the hospital as he was being treated for lung infection and gallstones.

    15 comments

    Maybe the commie will die tomorrow and make the world a better place for it.

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  • Updated
    29
    Mar
    2013
    8:15am, EDT

    Nelson Mandela in 'good spirits' in South Africa hospital

    The former South African president is responding to treatment for a recurring lung infection, officials say. This marks the third time in four months the 94-year-old has been hospitalized. NBC's Keir Simmons reports.

    By Alastair Jamieson, Staff writer, NBC News

    Former South Africa leader Nelson Mandela was in “good spirits” Friday, officials said, as he spent a second day in hospital where he is being treated for a recurring lung infection.

    “The doctors report that he is making steady progress,” said a statement from the country’s presidency, adding that the 94-year-old had “enjoyed a full breakfast.”

    Earlier, South Africa’s president, Jacob Zuma, sought to reassure his country over Mandela’s health, saying in a BBC interview that people "must not panic."

    However, he appeared to agree with the suggestion that South Africa should prepare for Mandela’s eventual death.

    “Is this a time for us to be aware of what is inevitable?” asked the BBC's Lerato Mbele. “Well, I would imagine so,” replied Zuma.

    Mandela, 94, was taken to a hospital just before midnight local time (6 p.m. ET) on Wednesday – his third hospital visit since December.

    He has a history of lung problems dating back to his days as a political prisoner in the notorious Robben Island jail under the apartheid regime, where inmates worked in an open quarry. He was diagnosed with tuberculosis in 1988 after being moved to Pollsmoor Prison.

    Mandela spent 18 days in hospital in December, undergoing surgery for gallstones.

    Earlier, President Barack Obama sent his best wishes to the former leader.

    "He is as strong physically as he's been in character and in leadership over so many decades, and hopefully he will ... come out of this latest challenge," Obama told reporters at the White House Thursday.

    "When you think of a single individual that embodies the kind of leadership qualities that I think we all aspire to, the first name that comes up is Nelson Mandela. And so we wish him all the very best," Obama said.

    NBC News’ Stacey Klein contributed to this report.

    Related:

    Secrecy over Mandela's health fuels concern for South Africa icon

    'Who is my Mandela?' South Africans consider icon's place in a changing world

     

    This story was originally published on Fri Mar 29, 2013 5:03 AM EDT

    14 comments

    He was the steadying force that kept South Africa from becoming another Rhodesia. He and Dr. King are the two great Black men of our time.

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    Explore related topics: world, health, south-africa, africa, featured, nelson-mandela, jacob-zuma, updated
  • 24
    Dec
    2012
    4:14pm, EST

    Secrecy over Mandela's health fuels concern for South Africa icon

    Slideshow: Nelson Mandela: A revolutionary's life

    /

    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

    By Ron Allen, NBC News

    JOHANNESBURG -- Nelson Mandela's life is an open book. Volumes chronicle every aspect of his 94 years. However, all that changed earlier this month when he was hospitalized.

    South Africa's President Jacob Zuma and his spokesman have released several brief statements saying essentially that Mandela "continues recovering,” and that there’s “no crisis.” The latest, issued Monday, said Mandela would spend Christmas Day in hospital, with Zuma asking "all freedom-loving people around the world to pray for him."

    All this has done little to quell the widespread fear in South Africa and around the world that the end of the life of “Madiba” -- as the beloved elder statesman is affectionately known here – is near.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    After more than two weeks of rumor, speculation and cryptic comments, very little is known for certain about how Mandela is really doing as he recovers from surgery to remove gallstones and treatment for a respiratory infection.

    Country 'a bit nervous'
    It’s been his longest hospital stay since everything changed in South Africa, when Mandela was released from prison and apartheid ended some two decades ago.

    “For a man of his age, Mandela is not doing badly,” Tokyo Sexwale, the government’s minister of human affairs, said in an interview in the garden outside his home.

    Sexwale, who has known and worked closely with Mandela since the 1970s, is also a trustee of the Nelson Mandela Foundation, or “the center of his memory,” as Sexwale calls it.

    From prisoner to liberator, Nelson Mandela's fight for equality in South Africa serves as a shining example of justice and peace. Here's a look at the pivotal moments in the life of South Africa's first black president.

    'Who is my Mandela?' South Africans consider icon's place in a changing world

    He said the Foundation receives anywhere from 6,000 to 7,000 messages of prayer, support and concern every week for Mandela.

    “I hope, Godspeed, he’ll still be with us for quite some time. The country feels a bit nervous, it’s like a family losing the father,” he added.

    He did not reveal specific details about Mandela’s condition or prognosis.

    “You have to speak quite loudly to him,” observed Peter Paul Ngwenya, who told NBC News that he was last with Mandela a few weeks ago.

    “He is very forgetful,” he said of the man he clearly idolizes. “He does remember faces and he does remember names.”

    Nelson Mandela undergoes surgery to remove gallstones

    Former South African President Nelson Mandela is being treated for a recurring lung infection. South African authorities gave few details about his illness, but have now said the 94-year-old is responding well to treatment. NBC's Rohit Kachroo reports.

    Sexwale and Ngwenya are former freedom fighters and political prisoners, a generation younger than Mandela.

    Sexwale was sentenced in 1977 to 18 years on Robben Island for treason and terrorism.  He served 13 years, much of it while Mandela was there.

    Trying to avoid 'death-watch circus'
    Ngwenya was convicted of similar offenses in 1985 and sentenced to 15 years. History was kind to him and as apartheid crumbled he was released early in 1990.

    The government has been notably brief about their hero's health.

    Its line is that it must protect Mandela's privacy, dignity, and give his doctors the space they need to care for him.

    “They really don’t want to turn this into a ghoulish, death-watch circus,” said Brooks Spector, a retired diplomat, academic, and NBC News consultant in South Africa.

    Secretary of State Clinton tells of the important life lessons she has learned through her friendship with Nelson Mandela.

    Killings of S. Africa farmers a toxic apartheid legacy

    What's more, this is not a culture like in America, where doctors routinely hold daily press briefings about high profile cases.

    “The government has never felt comfortable with the prying eyes of the media,” Spector said.

    First the government said it was a visit for "routine tests."

    Later, it was revealed he had a "respiratory infection."

    Finally came the announcement about the surgery, all with little explanation, and no opportunity for the media to ask questions.

    Since Mandela entered an unidentified hospital on Dec. 8 there has been something of a shell game. Is he at this or that hospital?

    Is he heading home, or there already?  Maybe he's going to Qunu, his homeland in a remote part of the Eastern Cape. Mandela has said he wants to spend his final days there.

    South Africa releases newly-minted bank notes showing the smiling face of former president Nelson Mandela. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

    All about peace, reconciliation
    For days the government would only say Mandela was in a hospital in Pretoria, the capital, without saying which one.

    Professor Adam Habib, of the University of Johannesburg, said the problem was that “the government tends not to be transparent and that breeds conspiracy theories.” 

    Habid said his sense of things was that “Mandela is not on his deathbed.”

    He said he did not think the government was lying about Mandela’s condition, but the entire situation should be handled in a “more mature way.”

    It doesn’t help that there’s growing and widespread criticism of the government and Zuma, who faces hundreds of corruption allegations.

    And nearly 20 years after Mandela was elected president, it’s difficult to find anyone who truly believes the nation and its leaders have lived up to his dream and his ideals.

    Meanwhile, South Africa hopes and prays for the best. When you ask someone here about Mandela, there’s often a pause before an answer. It’s a brief difficult moment when many perhaps allow themselves to contemplate the inevitable. 

    Reflecting on the last time he saw the quite frail Mandela a few weeks ago, Ngwenya said he was “sad to see him like that, but I was happy that he’s still around, because it’s like to have a parent who brought you up, and now you’re looking after them.”

    “It is good that your grandchildren and your children can still see this icon,” he added.

    Sexwale noted, “We draw strength not from the fact that Mandela is in the declining part of his years, but from the youth of his ideas. That’s what keeps this country alive.”

    Those ideas, he said, were all about peace and reconciliation. “I hope the memory of his ideas will be that which will drive not only our people here in South Africa, but all those who are inspired all over the world.”

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    46 comments

    Nelson Mandela's health is really not the concern of the entire fecking world! Give the man some peace and privacy for God's sake! He's ill and in the hospital. He doesn't need everyone to know what his condition is if he wants to rest!!!!

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    Explore related topics: south-africa, apartheid, featured, nelson-mandela, jacob-zuma, madiba
  • 17
    Dec
    2012
    9:01am, EST

    Police: Suspected far-right plot to bomb South Africa president, ANC party foiled

    /

    Delegates from the African National Congress attend the nomination session of their party meeting in Bloemfontein, South Africa, on Dec. 17.

    By Reuters

    BLOEMFONTEIN, South Africa -- South African police said Monday they had foiled a plot by suspected right-wing Afrikaner extremists targeting an African National Congress (ANC) conference attended by President Jacob Zuma and dozens of top government officials.

    Four men aged between 40 and 50 were arrested Sunday. A police spokesman told Reuters there was evidence they were planning acts around the country and not just at the ANC meeting in the central city of Bloemfontein.



    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    The vast majority of South Africa's whites accepted the ANC's victory in the 1994 election that brought Nelson Mandela to power and ended decades of white-minority rule. However, a tiny handful continues to oppose the historic settlement.

    "Their acts are widespread. We arrested them in different provinces," spokesman Billy Jones said.

    ANC spokesman Keith Khoza said preliminary information suggested the men were planning to bomb the marquee where Zuma and 4,500 delegates are holding a five-day meeting to chose the ANC's leadership for the next five years.

    "This would have been an act of terrorism that South Africa can ill afford," Khoza said.

    'Who is my Mandela?' South Africans consider icon's place in a changing world

    AFP / Getty Images

    South African President Jacob Zuma attends the second day of the annual meeting of the African National Congress in Bloemfontein on Dec. 17.

    Party denies link
    The Federal Freedom Party, a fringe group that campaigns for self-determination for the white Afrikaner minority, confirmed two of those arrested were party members, but denied any role in the suspected plot.

    "We were not involved and do not associate ourselves with their actions," national secretary Francois Cloete said.

    In July, a former university lecturer was found guilty of orchestrating a 2002 plot to overthrow the ANC and assassinate Mandela -- now 94 and receiving treatment in a Pretoria hospital for a lung infection.

    There was a heavy security presence at the Bloemfontein meeting and the few vehicles allowed onto the university campus hosting the event were being searched by police and sniffer dogs.

    Complete World coverage on NBCNews.com

    The conference is set to give Zuma a second mandate to lead the party and -- given the ANC's dominance at the ballot box -- another five-year term in 2014 as president of Africa's biggest economy.

    Slideshow: Nelson Mandela: A revolutionary's life

    /

    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

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    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    3 comments

    gd stonepipe Agreed.

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  • 12
    Oct
    2012
    12:19pm, EDT

    Struggle of South Africa's ANC descends into a deadly scramble for spoils

    Rogan Ward / Reuters

    African National Congress supporters leave the Durban Magistrates Court, where a man accused of murdering ANC councilor Mthembeni Shezi appeared Thursday for his trial.

    By Reuters

    WELBEDACHT, South Africa -- Mthembeni Shezi, a local African National Congress councilor in the run-down suburb of Welbedacht on South Africa's east coast, was wrapping up a routine meeting last month when two men barged in, sprayed the room with gunfire and shot him five times in the chest.

    "It was like a movie. The men just shot indiscriminately. It was scary. Everyone panicked. We hit the floor. I didn't think I would come out of there alive," said one woman present, who remains too frightened to reveal her name.

    "The gunmen seemed to know who they wanted," she said said.

    Far from being a movie, the hit represents the bloody reality of local politics for some in the African National Congress (ANC), and shows how far Nelson Mandela's 100-year-old liberation movement has strayed from the moral high ground it occupied when it came to power 18 years ago.


    Rare since the advent of democracy in 1994, political murders within the ruling party have soared in the last 18 months, with local officials turning on each other in a dog-eat-dog scramble for the spoils of power.

    President Jacob Zuma, who came to office in 2009, has pledged to crack down on corruption, but watchdog Transparency International suggests South Africa is sliding down the ranks, from 38th in the world in 2001 to 64th in 2011.

    Bloodshed
    As the level of corruption has risen, so has the carnage at the party's grass roots.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    In Zuma's home province of KwaZulu Natal, 38 ANC members have been killed since February 2011, according to an internal party investigation. By comparison, the previous three years saw only just over 10 politically-linked murders in the region.

    At the funeral of a prominent ANC official killed in a drive-by shooting in July, Zuma blamed the killings on "some forces of darkness ... bent on dividing our movement."

    Even though Africa's biggest economy has been struggling since a 2008-09 recession and the Treasury is trying to keep a lid on spending, local councils remain awash with cash ear-marked for roads, houses, water and electricity to redress the inequalities of decades of underspending under apartheid.

    Platinum mining firm fires 12,000 strikers in South Africa

    Exact reasons for the sharp rise in levels of corruption and the attendant killings are hard to pin down. But the sluggish recovery from the recession means there are fewer money-making options elsewhere and it also seems that the word has got out that local officialdom is the way to riches.

    There are also plenty of examples at the top of the ANC. Zuma was accused and never fully exonerated of receiving backhanders from a 1997 arms deal. Former ANC youth leader Julius Malema has been charged with money laundering.

    According to his friends, the 38-year-old Shezi, who died of his wounds a day later in hospital, became a target because he was one of the few straight ones.

    "People hated him because he was fighting corruption," his fiancée, Buyi Tshabalala, told Reuters. "He was in constant fear that he would be killed."

    Factbox: South Africa since apartheid

    Others contend that Shezi's lifestyle was too flashy for someone on a local councilor's salary. Those who attended the meeting at which he was shot believe his killing resulted from a dispute related to his job.

    Slideshow: Nelson Mandela: A revolutionary's life

    /

    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

    'Better life for some'
    Reuters has spoken to eight ANC officials in KwaZulu Natal, who said politicians and officials were dying in battles for council positions that give access to lucrative government contracts.

    Such killings have been recorded in all of South Africa's nine provinces -- in July, for instance, the mayor of the northwest city of Rustenburg was convicted for ordering the murder of a rival councilor.

    But Zuma's back yard, historically the wild and untamed home of the Zulus, has been hit hardest.

    In an episode typical of the violence in the province, an ANC branch chairman, Dumisani Malunga, was killed in August in a hit organized by a rival, Sifiso Khumalo.

    "There was absolutely no justification for you to eliminate him by the barrel of a gun to prevent him from vying for the position as ward councilor," the judge said in sentencing Khumalo to 22 years in jail for masterminding the killing.

    'Murder on a massive scale': Angry fallout from S. Africa mine shootings

    With an ANC leadership race coming up in December, few expect Zuma to crack down for fear of alienating supporters and damaging his chances of re-election as head of the party and, by extension, securing a second term as national president in 2014.

    "Having ANC membership is the best CV in town. The higher you go in the party, the more you can dish out patronage. It's about taking care of yourself and those close to you," said a member of the ANC's National Executive Committee, its highest decision-making body.

    Complete African coverage on NBCNews.com

    "It's no longer about the ANC slogan 'A better life for all'. It's now about a better life for some," said the official, who asked not to be named. "People are reducing the ANC to their personal kitty and are prepared to kill to get their slice of the wealth."

    From poverty to 'a fancy 4x4 and several houses'?
    Much of the problem lies with local government, with a staggering 95 percent of municipal administrations being unable to account for their receipts and spending, according to the Auditor General.

    Many councilors -- Shezi included -- come from impoverished backgrounds and some are barely educated. For some, having control of hundreds of millions of rand a year with little oversight is too great a temptation.

    "There are as many bad things to say about Shezi as there are good. People look at his lifestyle and ask: 'How does a herd boy from Nkandla go from having absolutely nothing to a fancy 4X4 and several houses?'" an ANC official in nearby Durban said.

    The ANC has spent billions of dollars fighting poverty since the birth of the "Rainbow Nation" in 1994, and has made enormous strides in providing electricity, running water and housing to the poor.

    Complete World coverage on NBCNews.com

    It has also seen enormous sums lost at the local level where checks are fewer and prosecutions rare for officials suspected of lining their pockets.

    "People start to see that being a local councilor can be a means to acquire wealth," the Durban official said.

    As the corruption has soared, so too have the protests by blacks living in shanty towns around major cities with no power, running water or job prospects. From just a few dozen a year under former President Thabo Mbeki, they are now a daily occurrence.

    The anger is unlikely to translate into a loss of power any time soon for the ANC, which continues to win support on the back of its role in ending apartheid. It was more than 40 percentage points ahead of its nearest rival in 2011 elections.

    However, there is a risk of the greed and cynicism tearing the party apart and, at least in KwaZulu Natal, rendering the province ungovernable.

    "If the situation is not controlled now, we run the risk of reverting to the early 1990s, when the province was wracked by political violence," said Kwanele Ncale, a spokesman for the team investigating Shezi's killing.

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    13 comments

    I'm sure the Boers and old colonials (those still alive) are tsk-tsking about how Africans still can't rule themselves. Democracy isn't very democratic.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: south-africa, african-national-congress, apartheid, featured, anc, nelson-mandela, jacob-zuma
  • 23
    May
    2012
    7:00am, EDT

    Painting over a presidential penis: Sign of respect for South Africa's Zuma or vandalism?

    Iman Rappetti / Enews via AP

    Two pictures show an unidentified man defacing a controversial portrait of South African President Jacob Zuma at the Goodman Gallery in Johannesburg, South Africa, on Tuesday.

    By Ian Johnston, msnbc.com

    Two men who vandalized a controversial painting of South African President Jacob Zuma with his genitals exposed were due to appear in court Wednesday.

    Television footage Tuesday showed a white middle-aged man in a suit walking up to the portrait, called The Spear, at a Johannesburg gallery and painting a red cross on the president's face and private parts, Reuters reported. A younger black man then  smeared black paint over the picture while the first man was being taken into custody by security guards.


    "I'm doing this because the painting is disrespectful to President Zuma," one of the men told BBC News.

    A BBC correspondent said he saw one of the vandals being head-butted as he was detained at the Goodman Gallery in Johannesburg.

    The picture of Zuma is a facsimile of a famous poster of communist revolutionary Vladimir Lenin. In the red, black and yellow painting, the president is shown striking Lenin's heroic stance, but with his penis hanging out of his trousers.

    Racist?
    Zuma's African National Congress party had already launched a legal bid to try to force the gallery to remove the picture, which it described as crude and racist.

    Minutes before the vandals attacked, ANC Secretary General Gwede Mantashe told Reuters people had a right to criticize the government, but there were limits.

    Farm worker found guilty over South African white supremacist's murder

    When you had an artist depicting the president's genitals, he added, "you are not raising a discussion, you are insulting people."

    Jerome Delay / AP

    Amid the controversy, supporters of South African President Jacob Zuma gather outside the South Gauteng High Court in Johannesburg on Tuesday.

    The artist, Brett Murray, is well-known in South Africa for his work criticizing the white-minority apartheid government that ended in 1994.

    The painting was taken down from display after the attack, prompting the Zimbabwe Mail newspaper to file a report headlined “Presidency penis goes into hiding.”

    'Paucity of morals'
    The Goodman Gallery said Murray’s exhibition, called Hail to the Thief II, “continues his acerbic attacks on abuses of power, corruption and political dumbness.”

    “Murray’s bronzes, etchings, paintings and silk-screens form part of a vitriolic and succinct censure of bad governance and are his attempts to humorously expose the paucity of morals and greed within the ruling elite,” the gallery said on its website, which was still showing an unvandalized image of the painting.

    Zuma has been married six times and fathered 21 children.

    Anton Harber, chairman of South Africa's Freedom of Expression Institute last week called the ANC's criticism of the picture "silly" and defended artists' right to pose difficult, uncomfortable questions with their work.

    Zuma sworn in as South Africa’s president

    The arrested men, Barend la Grange, and Lowie Mabokela were due to appear in court Wednesday, The City Press newspaper reported, along with a third man arrested outside the gallery after allegedly spraying paint on a wall.

    Reuters contributed to this report.

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    73 comments

    Maybe the painting should be titled 'letting it all hang out'! Seriously, if this was a nude portrait, I could see the 'parts' showing, but a fully dressed man with his 'privates' hanging out of his pants? Sort of disgusting. More pornographic than art, I'd say!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: art, president, south-africa, gallery, painting, featured, penis, jacob-zuma, vandalized

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