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THE BATTLE FOR NELSON MANDELA
by urecusa 25 Jul 2010 2:12 PM

The battle for Nelson Mandela's legacy By Farouk Chothia BBC News
[image: Nelson Mandela holding up a newly minted presidential coin in
September 2009] The Mandela name is worth millions

While South Africa's political icon Nelson Mandela is set to celebrate his
92nd birthday on Sunday, his relatives and colleagues are becoming
increasingly involved in bitter feuds for control of his name because of the
political and economic riches it carries.

The disputes are taking place at different levels, involving Mr Mandela's
family from his three marriages, the ruling African National Congress (ANC)
to which he dedicated most of his life, the various foundations and
charities he set up after his retirement in 1999, as well as political
comrades and business associates with whom he forged relations over many
years.
 [image: Nelson Mandela (left) and his wife Graca Machel (right)] Mr
Mandela's World Cup appearance caused a row

"It's nasty. People are fighting while he is still alive," says the South
African author and newspaper columnist Fred Khumalo.

The most recent controversy was over Mr Mandela's appearance at the football
World Cup.

In the build-up to the tournament, the ANC government's Sports Minister,
Makhenkesi Stofile, and Mr Mandela's grandson, Mandla Mandela, both claimed
to speak on behalf of the former president, and gave contradictory accounts
of his wishes.

Mr Stofile said Mr Mandela had "demanded" to appear at the opening, while
Mandla said he had indicated he would "prefer to be at home".

And Winnie Madikizela-Mandela, the anti-apartheid icon's second wife who he
divorced after his release from jail, entered the fray at a pre-World Cup
rally in Johannesburg.
 Continue reading the main
story<http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-10351550#skip_feature_02>
"Start Quote [image: Nelson Mandela and his grandson Mandla]

As a family, we are united in that the legacy of Madiba belongs to his
family first and to the ANC"

End Quote Mandla Mandela

Claiming to carry a message on behalf of "Tata" [father], she told the crowd
that he wanted the trophy to stay in Africa, indicating the extent to which
she was prepared to associate herself with his name, despite the acrimonious
personal and political fallout they had at the time of their divorce.

In the end, Mr Mandela did not attend the opening ceremony because of the
death of his great-grandchild in a car accident, but was there - according
to the Nelson Mandela Foundation which is officially in charge of his
itinerary - "in spirit".

Mr Mandela appeared briefly at the closing ceremony, with his current wife,
Graca Machel, helping him raise his hand to wave at the crowd - a clear sign
of how frail he has become.

Hinting that the issue had again ignited controversy, Mandla said Mr Mandela
had attended under "extreme pressure", putting the blame on the world
football governing body Fifa.
'In the blood'

It echoed the dispute over Mr Mandela's role in last year's hard-fought
general election.
 Nelson Mandela Timeline Continue reading the main
story<http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-10351550#skip_feature_02>

   - 1918 - Born in the Eastern Cape
   - 1956 - Charged with high treason, but charges dropped
   - 1964 - Charged again, sentenced to life
   - 1990 - Freed from prison
   - 1993 - Wins Nobel Peace Prize
   - 1994 - Elected first black president
   - 1999 - Steps down as leader
   - 2001 - Diagnosed with prostate cancer
   - 2004 - Retires from public life
   - 2005 - Announces his son has died of an HIV/Aids-related illness
   - 2007 - Forms The Elders group to solve Africa's problems


   - Mandela's life and times <http://www.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/1454208.stm>

 The Nelson Mandela Foundation ruled out Mr Mandela taking part in the
campaign, but lost the battle when he attended the final ANC rally to give
his backing to the party's controversial presidential candidate, Jacob Zuma.

Taking a swipe at the foundation at the time, Mandla said: "As a family, we
are united in that the legacy of Madiba [Mandela] belongs to his family
first and to the ANC."

New to the political stage, Mandla has become influential since his
appointment as a traditional chief in Mr Mandela's birthplace, the village
of Mvezo, and his elevation to parliament in last year's election.

"In my veins runs the blood of the Mandelas which has been around for
centuries," he once boasted.

Mr Khumalo has doubts about Mandla's rise to prominence, pointing out that
as early as 2008, Snuki Zikalala, the former head of news at the South
African Broadcasting Corporation, told the Sunday World newspaper that the
public broadcaster had paid Mandla 3m rand ( $395,000, £257,000) for rights
to cover Mr Mandela's funeral - an allegation Mandla strongly denied.

"It's as though the Mandela name is a licence to make money," says Mr
Khumalo.

Mandla was also involved in a bitter feud with the Nelson Mandela Museum
over plans to protect Mr Mandela's birthplace as a heritage site and accused
it - along with the Mandela Aids project, 46664, named after his prison
number - of "benefiting and profiting from my grandfather's name".

"They give nothing to his people... Mandela's people are dying here [in Mvezo]
from Aids, yet 46664 have done nothing here," he said in an interview with
South Africa's Mail & Guardian newspaper.
Martin Luther King parallel

But he is only one of several Mandelas claiming to be the true custodian of
the anti-apartheid icon's legacy.
 [image: A man looks at some limited edition signed lithographs from former
South African President Nelson Mandela on 9 March 2004 in New York City] There
has been a long-running dispute over some artwork with Mr Mandela's
signature

When Mr Mandela's 90th birthday was celebrated two years ago, most of his
six children boycotted an event held at his homestead in Qunu in the Eastern
Cape because of differences over the celebrations, despite a plea from Mr
Mandela and Mandla.

"We do not approve of the vineyard theme," one of the children said in a
letter referring to a bottle of wine produced for the occasion with a
personalised birthday greeting to Mr Mandela on the label.

"Tata's legacy institutions have taken a decision not to have Tata's image
associated with tobacco products, alcohol or drugs," the letter said.

With his name a global brand worth millions of dollars, Mr Mandela has also
been involved in a long-running dispute with his former lawyer Ismail Ayob,
who acted for him when he was in jail on Robben Island, and businessman Ross
Calder over the sale of artwork bearing his signature.

Mr Mandela has been trying to prevent them from selling the artwork and
demanded they account for large sums of money collected through sales.

When the row first erupted, Mr Ayob's son, Zayd Ayob, said that "all the
money went to the family".

This appeared to be a reference to the Mandela Trust, a private fund
administered by Mr Mandela's children.

Hitting back, Mr Mandela's lawyer George Bizos said: "Mr Mandela's dispute
is with Ayob and Calder, and not with his children."
 Continue reading the main
story<http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-10351550#skip_feature_02>
"Start Quote

He is old now and people are just abusing his name "

End Quote Columnist Fred Khumalo

   - Marketing the cult of Mandela<http://www.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/4120990.stm>

 But suspicion lingers that Mr Mandela's family, as well as his political
comrades and business associates, will become involved in more acrimonious
battles once he dies.

There would be a parallel in this with another globally recognised black
civil rights activist, Martin Luther King Jr, whose family is still fighting
for control of his estate more than 40 years after his death.

Last year, South Africa's Sunday Times newspaper reported that Mr Mandela
had convened a family meeting to discuss his will.

At the meeting he reportedly suggested that the Nelson Mandela Foundation
should inherit a large portion of his estate and the rest should go to his
children, Mandla, his grandson, and his current wife, Graca Machel.

But, the newspaper said, no agreement was reached.

It showed Mr Mandela's weakening grip on his affairs.

"He is old now and people are just abusing his name and dragging him to
public events," Mr Khumalo says.

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