African Press International (API)

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My Meeting Mandela in Oslo in 1994 – Man of high integrity

Posted by African Press International on January 2, 2008

I was privileged to meet Mr Mandela for the first time when he attended a Hate/Peace conference in Oslo in 1994,  before becoming South Africa’s first black President on 10th May the same year.
As he came from his hotel room in SAS hotel, Oslo, headed for the conference hall to address conference delegates, I was at the conference corridor also headed for the same conference. I stopped when I saw him coming behind me and shouted for his attention by calling his name.
On doing so, Mandela, a man of integrity did not shy away. He stopped, we shook hands and exchanged words of encouragement. I was at the time the only black reporter based in Oslo filing stories for a number of African newspapers.
It was a pleasant meeting shaking hands with a man who had fought for freedom for the black South Africans and got locked up for 27 years by the then white regime in his country.
Shaking hands with Mandela was an experience. His hands so soft like that of a young baby although he had been put on hard labour by his captives. Soft hands that carried warmth, human love and peace from his heart that was transformed to total peaceful reconciliation, saving his country and his black sisters and brothers from going for revenge. I felt a bond when I shook his hands and that experience has remained in my heart until this date, the second of January 2008 when the need to recall the events of that day is necessary. He was and still is a man of peace.
I am remembering that day of the peace conference in Oslo when I met and talked with him. This is because the same peace he talked about in the conference, the peace that South Africans needed when blacks and whites in his country hated one another and thoughts of reconciliation far away, is now needed by the Kenyans after the recently held presidential elections that now causes turmoil in the country.
Just like many others, admire Mandela because he came out of prison, was elected to power, he forgave the whites who had denied him freedom and placed reconciliation as his number one agenda.
Kenyan leaders should now do the same by looking forward and give peace a priority. Those who won and those who lost should think of the people they lead and work for reconciliation and peace in the country.
By Korir, Chief Editor, API/APN
———
Mandela Story: BBC
mandela_nelson.jpgLeading anti-apartheid campaigner Nelson Mandela was freed from prison in South Africa in 1990 after 27 years.

His release follows the relaxation of apartheid laws – including lifting the ban on leading black rights party the African National Congress (ANC) – by South African President FW de Klerk.

Mr Mandela appeared at the gates of Victor-Verster Prison in Paarl at 1614 local time – an hour late – with his wife Winnie.

Holding her hand and dressed in a light brown suit and tie he smiled at the ecstatic crowds and punched the air in a victory salute before taking a silver BMW sedan to Cape Town, 40 miles away.

People danced in the streets across the country and thousands clamoured to see him at a rally in Cape Town

Nelson Mandela succeeded Oliver Tambo as president of the ANC later in 1991.He divorced Winnie the next year following her convictions for kidnapping and being accessory to an assault.Mr Mandela and FW de Klerk shared the Nobel Peace Prize in 1993 for their efforts to transform South African society.In the first multi-racial elections in the country’s history he was elected president and the ANC gained 252 of the 400 seats in the national assembly.

10th of May 1994 – becomes the first black president of South Africa

He was succeeded as ANC president by Thabo Mbeki in 1997 and stepped down in favour of Mr Mbeki as national president after the 1999 elections.

Mr Mandela re-married in 1998 and was diagnosed with prostate cancer in 2001, aged 83.

————BBC

Mandela led the struggle to replace the apartheid regime of South Africa with a multi-racial democracy. He was imprisoned for 27 years and went on to become his country’s first black president. Rolihlahla Mandela was born in Transkei, South Africa on 18 July 1918 and was given the name of Nelson by one of his teachers. His father Henry was a respected advisor to the Thembu royal family.

Mandela was educated at the University of Fort Hare and later at the University of Witwatersrand, qualifying in law in 1942. He became increasingly involved with the African National Congress (ANC), a multi-racial nationalist movement trying to bring about political change in South Africa.

In 1948, the National Party came to power and began to implement a policy of ‘apartheid’, or forced segregation on the basis of race. The ANC staged a campaign of passive resistance against apartheid laws. In 1952, Mandela became one of the ANC’s deputy presidents. By the late 1950s, faced with increasing government discrimination, Mandela, his friend Oliver Tambo, and others began to move the ANC in a more radical direction. Mandela was tried for treason in 1956, but acquitted after a five-year trial.

In March 1960, sixty-nine black anti-apartheid demonstrators were killed by police at Sharpeville. The government declared a state of emergency and banned the ANC. In response, the organisation abandoned its policy of non-violence and Mandela helped establish the ANC’s military wing ‘Umkhonto we Sizwe’ or ‘The Spear of the Nation’. He was appointed its commander-in-chief and travelled abroad to receive military training and to find support for the ANC.

On his return he was arrested and sentenced to five years in prison. In 1963, Mandela and other ANC leaders were tried for plotting to overthrow the government by violence. The following year Mandela was sentenced to life imprisonment. He was held in Robben Island prison, off the coast of Cape Town, and later in Pollsmoor Prison on the mainland. During his years in prison he became an international symbol of resistance to apartheid.

In 1990, the South African government responded to internal and international pressure and released Mandela, at the same time lifting the ban against the ANC. In 1991 Mandela became the ANC’s leader.

He was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize together with FW de Klerk, then president of South Africa, in 1993. The following year South Africa held its first multi-racial election and Mandela was elected its first black president. In 1998, he was married for the third time to Gracia Machel, the widow of the president of Mozambique. Mandela’s second wife, Winnie, whom he married in 1958 and divorced in 1996, remains a controversial anti-apartheid activist. In 1997 he stepped down as ANC leader and in 1999 his presidency of South Africa came to an end.

Mandela continues to support a variety of causes, particularly the fight against HIV-Aids. In 2004, Mandela announced he would be retiring from public life and his public appearances have become less and less frequent. On 29 August 2007, a permanent statue to Nelson Mandela was unveiled in Parliament Square, London.

Published by Korir, API/APN africanpress@chello.no

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