President Robert Mugabe called for the lifting of "illegally imposed sanctions" on his
regime.
Mandela meets the elderly
Article By:
Fri, 05 Sep 2008 17:19
A group of 18 elderly South Africans — including a 134-year-old
woman from Limpopo — met former president Nelson Mandela at his
offices in Johannesburg on Friday.
Centenarian "Koko" Moloko Temo, from Mohadi ga Manthata village, was
accompanied by her 89-year-old daughter Eveline, the Nelson Mandela
Foundation said in a statement.
Temo, who was born on 4 July 1874, found it more comfortable to sit
on the floor rather than in her wheelchair and sang a special birthday
song she had composed for Mandela, who turned 90 on 18 July.
The South Africa Olde Person's Forum's visit was the idea of Masindi
Wilson Mufamadi from Vhembe District, in Limpopo.
"I am so happy, I will sleep nicely. It is my day today. It's all
right, I can die today, I don't care," said Mufamadi, who lived in
Alexandra in 1950s and first met Mandela when he was a lawyer at
Chancellor House in Johannesburg.
The 18 cheered, ululated and sang for Mandela, then presented
him
with gifts including a portrait of himself painted on the skin of a
goat from Ethiopia "because he trained to be a guerrilla in Ethiopia",
said Tom Boya, an executive member of the forum.
He was referring to the period in 1962 when Mandela visited various
African countries to raise support for the African National Congress
and its military wing, Umkhonto we Sizwe, the foundation said.
After his tour, which included a trip to London, Mandela was
arrested on 5 August 1962 and was charged with inciting a strike and
leaving the country illegally.
He was sentenced to five years in jail. He was brought back from
prison to stand trial for sabotage in the infamous Rivonia Trial. He
was sentenced to life imprisonment with seven others on 12 June 1964
and was released on 11 February 1990.