SOUTH AFRICA Official cancels trip amid Mandela worry


Associated Press

JOHANNESBURG

South Africa’s president visited a gravely ill Nelson Mandela in the hospital on Wednesday night, and canceled a visit planned for today to Mozambique, an indication of heightened concern over the deteriorating health of the man widely considered the father of the country.

President Jacob Zuma found 94-year-old Mandela to still be in critical condition during the 10 p.m. visit and was briefed by doctors “who are still doing everything they can to ensure his well-being,” Zuma’s office said in a statement.

It said the president decided to cancel a visit to Maputo, the Mozambican capital, today, where he was to attend a meeting on regional investment.

As worries over Mandela mounted, Mac Maharaj, the presidential spokesman, declined to comment on media reports that the former president and anti-apartheid leader was on life support systems in the Pretoria hospital where he was taken June 8 to be treated for what the government said was a recurring lung infection.

“I cannot comment on the clinical details of these reports because that would breach the confidentiality of the doctor/patient relationship,” Maharaj said in an interview with South Africa’s Radio 702.

South Africans were torn Wednesday between the desire not to lose Mandela, who defined the aspirations of so many of his compatriots, and resignation that the beloved former prisoner and president is approaching the end of his life.

The sense of anticipation and foreboding about Mandela’s fate has grown since late Sunday, when the South African government declared that the condition of the statesman had deteriorated.