Nelson Mandela memorial brings old foes together
Cuba's president, Raúl Castro, will join Barack Obama and South Africa's president, Jacob Zuma, among the speakers paying tribute to Nelson Mandela on Tuesday at what has been described as the biggest funeral in history.
The
memorial service in Johannesburg, in effect the first leg of a funeral
that culminates with Mandela's burial on Sunday, will also include
interfaith prayers, eulogies by four of Mandela's grandchildren and
speeches by the presidents of Brazil, Namibia, India and Cuba, along
with the vice-president of China. Zuma will deliver the keynote address.
For
dignitaries attending the service, not least Obama and Castro, a
potential diplomatic minefield awaits. But Zelda la Grange, Mandela's
personal assistant for more than a decade, told Reuters: "Tomorrow,
people should all be honouring their relationship with Madiba. If it
means shaking hands with the enemy, yes, I would like to see that. That
is what Nelson Mandela was and actually is – bringing people together
despite their differences."
The cover of the official memorial
programme bears the title "State memorial service for the late former
president Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela" above a picture of South Africa's
first black president smiling and wearing a characteristically
flamboyant shirt. Inside the programme is an obituary over two pages
that concludes: "Mr Mandela is survived by his wife, Graca, three
daughters, 18 grandchildren and 12 great-grandchildren."
Obama and
his wife, Michelle, will be joined by the former presidents Jimmy
Carter, Bill Clinton and George W Bush. Also attending are David
Cameron, Ban Ki-moon, assorted princes and princesses, and celebrities
including Bono, Oprah Winfrey and the Spice Girls. Mandela dubbed the
last his "heroes" after meeting the pop group 16 years ago.
Clayson Monyela, South Africa's head of public diplomacy, tweeted:
"Pope John Paul's funeral brought together 70 heads of state & 14
leaders of other regions. With #Mandela we're already over 91 &
counting."
On Monday workers were inside the 95,000-capacity FNB
stadium welding scaffolding for a stage and installing bulletproof glass
to protect foreign leaders. Ground crews cut the grass in front of the
venue, dubbed the "calabash" because of its shape. The stadium, where
Mandela made his last public appearance,
at the closing ceremony of the 2010 football World Cup, is expected to
fill rapidly on Tuesday, posing a huge security and logistical challenge
for South African authorities.
All police leave has been
cancelled and thousands of officers called up to direct traffic, protect
mourners and help the bodyguards of visiting dignitaries.
Government
minister Collins Chabane said officials could not guess how many people
would attend or would try to enter the stadium. "Once we see that the
numbers are becoming unmanageable … access will be denied," he said.
Chabane
appealed to those who were turned away to "respond with decency",
pointing out that spillover venues with big screens had been set up.
The
government will be seeking to avoid a repeat of the disarray around
last year's centenary celebrations of the African National Congress
(ANC). African leaders were reportedly forced to go shopping
when they found no food or bedding at their accommodation. Uganda's
president, Yoweri Museveni, apparently had to send for some grilled
chicken from Nando's.
Chabane said 91 heads of state and
government had confirmed their attendance by noon on Monday but
dismissed predictions that officials would be overwhelmed. "For those
who predict there will be chaos, we're used to it. It's not new."
Soon
after the end of racial apartheid, Collins noted, South Africa had
hosted the rugby World Cup, football's Africa Cup of Nations and
numerous other showpiece events. "People said there would be chaos. It
didn't happen."
He added: "Our people, our supporters are with us to make sure this is a success. We'll prove them [the doubters] wrong."
A
joint taskforce of police, diplomats and intelligence service personnel
has been in talks with the foreign delegations who plan to attend the
ceremony, due to start at 11am and finish at 3pm.
Both Obama and
Cameron are understood to be arriving on Tuesday morning. Of the US
presidents attending, only Clinton, who was close to Mandela, is thought
to be staying long enough to attend Sunday's burial in Qunu, in Eastern
Cape province. Cameron will not be present there but Prince Charles
will attend.
The clamour to honour Mandela looks set to
potentially eclipse the funerals of Winston Churchill, Diana, Princess
of Wales, John F Kennedy and Pope John Paul – a big organisational ask
for any country. Brooks Spector, a Johannesburg-based former US
diplomat, said: "Apart from the UN, this looks like the biggest
gathering of heads of state there has ever been. It's a rare event that
gets the sitting US president and three ex-presidents together except an
inauguration. The South African government was preparing in many ways
but the tidal wave might have surprised even those preparing."
Asked
whether South Africa can cope, Spector replied: "It'll work because it
has to work. They won't leave a king on the side of a highway trying to
thumb a lift to the FNB Stadium. When they put their minds to it and
national honour is at stake, they pull it off. Clearly national honour
is at stake on this one.
"This is a shared national moment. It's
going to be unique in this nation's history. There's a lot of goodwill
and a lot of energy directed towards getting it right."
Mandela's
body will lie in state in the capital, Pretoria, on Wednesday, Thursday
and Friday before being flown to Qunu, the village where he grew up.
Officials said his burial ceremony would run from 9am to noon on Sunday,
with the guest list not exceeding 5,000 people.
No heads of state
would be turned away, they added, but they have generally been
discouraged from attending because of the daunting logistics in the
remote rural area. More than 1,500 journalists have been accredited for
the events.
Across the country on Monday, South Africans continued
to celebrate the life of the anti-apartheid hero. Just after dawn a
two-mile-long motorcade of cars full of ANC supporters left Cape Town
for the former Victor Verster prison, the last jail where Mandela was
held and where, emerging alongside his former wife Winnie with his fist
raised triumphantly, he marked his transformation from revolutionary
fighter to elder statesman.
Inside the on-site house, a candle
burned on the table where a historic settlement was reached between
Mandela and the then president, FW de Klerk. "I'm feeling emotional,
sad, but also honoured to have been alive during his lifetime," said
Jo-Anne Aranes, a cleaner whose car was plastered in the green, gold and
black of the ANC flag. Her 10-year-old daughter had accompanied her.
"It's extra-special to me because my daughter is here to learn our
history," she said.
from: http://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/dec/09/obama-castro-speakers-nelson-mandela-memorial
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