China Daily

S. African anti-apartheid icon Kathrada dies

-

CAPE TOWN — Veteran South African anti-apartheid activist Ahmed Kathrada, who was sentenced to life imprisonme­nt alongside Nelson Mandela and went on to be an open critic of President Jacob Zuma, died on Tuesday aged 87.

Affectiona­tely known as “Uncle Kathy”, the liberation struggle stalwart who spent 26 years in prison under the apartheid government, was hospitaliz­ed in Johannesbu­rg this month after surgery to relieve blood clotting on the brain.

Kathrada’s foundation said his condition had deteriorat­ed rapidly with pneumonia affecting both lungs. It announced his death at 6 am local time.

Zuma said Kathrada would be honored at an official state funeral and flags at government offices would fly at halfmast until then.

Nobel Peace Prize winner Archbishop Desmond Tutu said Kathrada helped inspire the world’s confidence in South Africa’s long battle against white-minority rule.

“May Ahmed rest in peace andriseing­lory,”Tutusaidin­a statement. “May he rejoice in many heavenly cups of hot chocolate with his old friends and comrades.”

Kathrada, who dedicated his life to fighting the racial injustice of white-minority rule, was also one of the most senior African National Congress leaders to criticize Zuma as allegation­s of government corruption mounted.

Last year, Kathrada wrote an open letter calling on Zuma to resign after a series of scandals, from using taxpayers money to upgrade his rural home to destabiliz­ing financial markets by flip-flopping on cabinet appointmen­ts.

Born to immigrant Indian parents in the small town of Schweizer-Reneke in the North West province just before the Great Depression in 1929, Kathrada became involved in politics at the age of 12 when he distribute­d leaflets for the Young Communist League of South Africa.

Following decades of activism, Kathrada was sentenced to life imprisonme­nt and hard labor in 1964, together with seven other ANC luminaries such as Mandela, Walter Sisulu and Govan Mbeki, after a guilty verdict during the Rivonia treason trail.

Jailed at the age of 34, Kathrada spent the next 18 years at the maximum security section on apartheid’s most notorious prison, Robben Island, a few miles offshore from Cape Town.

He was moved to Pollsmoor prison in 1982 and was released from jail in 1989 at the age of 60, having spent 26 years in jail.

 ?? KEVIN LAMARQUE / REUTERS ?? A man kneels beside Angel Marie, a miniature horse who wears a prosthetic leg made by Campana, at Animal Ortho Care in Sterling, Virginia, United States, on Monday.
KEVIN LAMARQUE / REUTERS A man kneels beside Angel Marie, a miniature horse who wears a prosthetic leg made by Campana, at Animal Ortho Care in Sterling, Virginia, United States, on Monday.
 ??  ?? Ahmed Kathrada
Ahmed Kathrada

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong