The Phnom Penh Post

A night in Mandela’s prison cell for only $300K

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FOR rich corporate executives, fine food, expensive wine and five-star hotels come as standard.

But one discerning top boss with a spare $300,000 (€260,000) will give up creature comforts for a night in the cramped prison cell that was Nelson Mandela’s home for 18 years.

That is according to the organisers of the annual CEO Sleepout, an initiative which raises money for various charities.

South Africa’s first democratic, black president was kept in South Africa’s Robben Island prison off Cape Town for much of his 27-year incarcerat­ion.

A night in his iconic 8-foot by 7-foot (2.4 metres by 2.1 metres) concrete cell will now be auctioned for charity to mark the centenary of prisoner number 46664’s birthday.

“The suggestion was to auction the cell to raise money to fund the Prisonto-College Pipeline . . . educating incarcerat­ed people in South Africa,” said Liane McGowan, spokeswoma­n for the CEO SleepOut South Africa, adding that details of when the one-nightonly fundraiser will take place had not been finalised.

Online bidding started at $250,000 and had already attracted three bids, reaching $300,000, with the auction set to close on July 16.

The winner will spend one night in Mandela’s cell number seven, while up to 66 other bidders will sleep elsewhere in the island prison that is now a museum and World Heritage site.

Unusual locations

The Museum’s management could not be reached for comment. The Nelson Mandela foundation said it was not a part of the initiative and could not be responsibl­e for the usage of Mandela’s cell.

Sixty-seven was chosen as Mandela dedicated 67 years of his life to the fight against the racist apartheid system that governed South Africa until Mandela won the first democratic non-racial elections in 1994.

The initiative is part of the CEO SleepOut movement which auctions nights in unusual locations to wealthy business leaders to raise money for charitable causes. The Robben Island event will raise funds for the Prison-toCollege Pipeline (P2P), a scheme that began in New York to help prisoners access university-level education. The P2P initiative will be launched in South Africa on 18 July, Mandela’s birthday.

A similar event will be held on July 11 at the Liliesleaf Farm in northern Johannesbu­rg, which was used as a safehouse by several anti-apartheid fighters including Mandela.

The base was raided by apartheid security forces in 1963 and several anti-regime leaders faced the courts at the so-called “Rivonia Trial” which resulted in Mandela being jailed for life.

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