Nelson Mandela, the ailing former South African president and
anti-apartheid hero, is recovering well from a lung infection which has
kept him in a serious condition in hospital for a week, his grandson
says.
The comment by Mandla Mandela on Saturday was the latest
indication that the health of 94-year-old grandfather, South Africa's
first black president, was showing signs of improvement.
Mandela
has been receiving visits from family members after he was rushed to
hospital a week ago with a recurrence of lung problems.
"Madiba is
recovering very well and looks good," Mandla Mandela said in Qunu, a
village in the Eastern Cape province where Mandela was born and spent
his early years.
Speaking in Xhosa at a funeral of another relative, Mandla used the clan name 'Madiba' by which Mandela is popularly known.
"I
thank the nation and the world for the prayers for Madiba, and the
doctors and the office of the ANC for keeping the family updated," he
said.
South Africa's government said on Thursday that Mandela was continuing to recover but his condition remained serious.
Mandela's
hospitalisation is his fourth since December and has reinforced growing
awareness among South Africa's 53 million people that they will one day
have to say goodbye to the father of the "Rainbow Nation" created from
the ashes of apartheid.
Mandela has a history of lung problems
dating back to his time at the windswept Robben Island prison camp near
Cape Town. He was released in 1990 after 27 years behind bars and went
on to serve as president from 1994 to 1999.
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