Los Angeles Times

Winnie Madikizela-Mandela dies

- By Robyn Dixon reporting from johannesbu­rg, south africa robyn.dixon@latimes.com

The former wife of Nelson Mandela, South Africa’s first black president, was herself an anti-apartheid activist and politician.

Winnie Madikizela-Mandela, the former wife of Nelson Mandela who died in Johannesbu­rg on Monday, was revered by many in South Africa as the “Mother of the Nation,” but criticized by others over a brutal apartheid-era killing by her thuggish bodyguards.

A contentiou­s figure dogged by controvers­y, she was also a prominent antiaparth­eid activist and politician. Madikizela-Mandela died in a hospital after being admitted with a kidney infection. She was 81.

Born in the village of Bizana in the Eastern Cape to parents who were teachers, she moved to Johannesbu­rg and graduated from college as a social worker. She married Mandela in 1958, six years before he was sentenced to life imprisonme­nt for treason.

She campaigned relentless­ly for Mandela’s release during his 27-year imprisonme­nt, raised two daughters alone, faced harassment by South African security forces and served more than a year in prison, including time in solitary confinemen­t, after being arrested by security police in 1969 in front of her children for violations of the Terrorism Act.

A prominent face of the liberation struggle to overturn the apartheid system of officially mandated racial segregatio­n, she was “banned” by the government in 1962, a designatio­n that barred her from giving interviews or attending meetings for 13 years. In 1977, she was banished to the town of Brandt in what was then the Orange Free State, and denied permission to leave. Her house was firebombed twice. In 1985 she defied the apartheid regime and returned home to Soweto, the black township outside Johannesbu­rg.

Madikizela-Mandela called herself the “grandmothe­r of Africa” and once told an interviewe­r, “My continent knows more about me than I do myself.” In 2016, the ANC called her “a fearless freedom fighter, stalwart of our movement and mother of the nation.” Last year then-President Jacob Zuma bestowed on her the nation’s highest honor, the Order of Luthuli.

A family statement released Monday called Madikizela-Mandela “one of the greatest icons of the struggle against apartheid.”

But she left a contentiou­s legacy because of her bodyguards’ role in the killing of a teenage boy, as well as her support for “necklacing,” a gruesome practice in which tires filled with gasoline were fastened around the necks of suspected informers and set alight.

“With our necklaces and our boxes of matches we will liberate this country,” she said in a 1986 speech.

More controvers­ial was her alleged role in the death of 14-year-old Stompie Moeketsi in 1989. The teen was abducted by her bodyguards, named the Mandela United Football Club, from the home of Methodist Minister Paul Verren in Soweto. The boy was beaten for days and slain using a pair of garden shears because he was suspected of being an informer. Winnie Mandela was charged in his death but was convicted only of abduction and being an accessory to assault and was sentenced to six years’ imprisonme­nt. She appealed and had the accessory charge dismissed. Her sentence was reduced to a fine.

But the case came up again in 1997 during deliberati­ons by South Africa’s Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission, led by then-Anglican Archbishop Desmond Tutu, when her chief bodyguard, the “coach” of the football club, Jerry Richardson, who was convicted of the boy’s murder, said he killed Moeketsi on Madikizela-Mandela’s orders.

She denied any role while acknowledg­ing that “things went horribly wrong.” The commission report said various versions had implicated her in the boy’s murder or its attempted cover-up.

“The Commission has not been able to establish conclusive­ly the veracity of any of these versions. Ms. Madikizela-Mandela’s testimony before the Commission was characteri­zed by a blanket denial of all allegation­s against her. It was only … under great pressure from Archbishop Desmond Tutu that she reluctantl­y conceded that ‘things had gone horribly wrong,’ ” the report said.

In 1992, shortly after his release from prison, Mandela announced that he was separating from his wife over “tensions” related to difference­s on a number of issues. He dropped her from his Cabinet as deputy minister for arts, culture, science and technology in 1995 after allegation­s of corruption and divorced her in 1996.

In 2003, she was convicted of fraud while serving as an African National Congress lawmaker. She and her financial advisor, Addy Moolman, were convicted of writing fraudulent letters to obtain bank loans for nonexisten­t clients.

Initially sentenced to five years in prison, she appealed and was given a three-year suspended prison sentence.

In 2010 she gave an interview to the Pakistani journalist Nadira Naipaul in which she was quoted accusing Mandela of letting down black South Africans and criticizin­g him for accepting the 1993 Nobel Peace Prize alongside the white National Party leader F.W. De Klerk.

“Mandela let us down. He agreed to a bad deal for the blacks. Economical­ly, we are still on the outside. The economy is very much white. It has a few token blacks, but so many who gave their life in the struggle have died unrewarded,” she was quoted as saying.

Photograph­s of Madikizela-Mandela were published with the article, but she denied the interview ever took place.

Toward the end of his life, as Mandela’s health grew poor, Madikizela-Mandela visited him often.

After Mandela’s death in 2013, Madikizela-Mandela contested his will, in which he left his ancestral home to the Nelson Mandela Family Trust for the use of his children and his wife, Graca Machel.

Madikizela-Mandela said the property was hers, and that she remained married to him under customary law despite the 1996 civil divorce. The Supreme Court of Appeal denied her claim in January.

Tutu paid tribute to Madikizela-Mandela’s contributi­on in a statement.

“She refused to be bowed by the imprisonme­nt of her husband‚ the perpetual harassment of her family by security forces‚ detentions‚ bannings and banishment. Her courageous defiance was deeply inspiratio­nal to me‚ and to generation­s of activists,” Tutu said.

Madikizela-Mandela had been ill for some years. She died surrounded by her family.

 ?? Associated Press ??
Associated Press
 ?? Associated Press ?? ‘MOTHER OF THE NATION’ Winnie Madikizela-Mandela, former wife of Nelson Mandela, was a prominent anti-apartheid activist in South Africa. But she left a contentiou­s legacy, partly stemming from the killing of a teen by her bodyguards.
Associated Press ‘MOTHER OF THE NATION’ Winnie Madikizela-Mandela, former wife of Nelson Mandela, was a prominent anti-apartheid activist in South Africa. But she left a contentiou­s legacy, partly stemming from the killing of a teen by her bodyguards.
 ?? Internatio­nal Defence and Aid Fund for Southern Africa ?? UNITED FOR A CAUSE The couple married in 1958, six years before Mandela was sentenced to life in prison. After his release in 1992, they separated and in 1996 they divorced.
Internatio­nal Defence and Aid Fund for Southern Africa UNITED FOR A CAUSE The couple married in 1958, six years before Mandela was sentenced to life in prison. After his release in 1992, they separated and in 1996 they divorced.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States