
Johannesburg – Nelson Mandela remains in a critical but stable condition, President Jacob Zuma said Tuesday, more than two months after the former president was hospitalised with a recurring lung infection.
“Former president Mandela is still in hospital receiving treatment and remains in a critical but stable condition,” Zuma said.
Mandela, 95, has been receiving treatment for a recurring respiratory illness at a private hospital in Pretoria since 8 June.
He was previously said to be on life support, but his condition has been lately described as serious but improving.
Early this month, his former wife Winnie Madikizela-Mandela told Sky News that he was “now breathing normally” and that doctors had kept draining fluid from his lungs.
Award
Zuma gave the latest health update during a visit to Malaysia, where he received an award on Mandela’s behalf.
The southeast Asian nation honoured the ailing statesman with the inaugural Mahathir Global Peace Award, named after the country’s former prime minister.
Zuma said South Africans were humbled to share South Africa’s revered peace icon with the world.
“While wishing him good health, we also have to celebrate his legacy and learn from it, in order to build a better world.”
Mandela has been in and out of hospital since last year, with lung related complications.
In December, he spent nearly three weeks in hospital where he was treated for a lung infection and gall stones. This is his longest hospitalisation since he was released from jail in 1990.
Political leaders from across the world and the South African public have been sending Mandela messages of support since his admission.
– AFP