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Mandela Remains in Intensive Care Mandela Remains in Intensive Care
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JOHANNESBURG — Former President Nelson Mandela of South Africa spent his fourth day in intensive care in a Pretoria hospital Tuesday, battling a lung infection that has raised fears that the 94-year-old anti-apartheid leader is nearing the end of his life. JOHANNESBURG — Former President Nelson Mandela of South Africa spent a fourth day in intensive care at a Pretoria hospital on Tuesday, battling a lung infection that has raised fears that he is nearing the end of his life.
Family members, including his former wife, Winnie Madikizela-Mandela, and several of his grandchildren have visited Mr. Mandela in the past 24 hours. Local news reports said that his daughter Zenani Dlamini, who is South Africa's ambassador to Argentina, is returning to South Africa to be at his side. His wife, Graça Machel, a children's rights advocate, canceled a trip to London, where she was to have given a speech on hunger. Family members, including his former wife, Winnie Madikizela-Mandela, and several of his grandchildren, have visited him in the last 24 hours. Local news reports said his daughter Zenani Dlamini, who is the South African ambassador to Argentina, is returning to the country to be at his side. His wife, Graça Machel, a children’s rights advocate, canceled a trip to London, where she had been scheduled to give a speech on hunger.
Mr. Mandela has been in frail health for the past few years, and since December he has been hospitalized four times. His lungs are fragile as a result of contracting tuberculosis during the 27 years he spent imprisoned for fighting against the white supremacist government of South Africa. Mr. Mandela, 94, has been in frail health for the past few years and has been hospitalized four times since December. His lungs are fragile as a result of contracting tuberculosis during the 27 years he spent imprisoned for fighting the white supremacist government of South Africa.
As his health has declined, well-wishers have gathered in churches and at monuments to Mr. Mandela to pray for him. Some said they hoped he would soon recover, but others said that after a long life well lived, the country must let go of Mr. Mandela. As his health has declined, well-wishers have gathered at churches and monuments to Mr. Mandela to pray for him. Some said they hoped he would recover soon, but others said that he had lived a long life and that the country must let go of him.
“The family must release him so that God may have his own way,” Andrew Mokete Mlangeni, a fellow prisoner at Robben Island with Mr. Mandela, told The Sunday Times newspaper. “We will say, ‘Thank you, God, you have given us this man.’ “The family must release him so that God may have his own way,” Andrew Mokete Mlangeni, who was a prisoner at Robben Island with Mr. Mandela, told The Sunday Times newspaper. “We will say: ‘Thank you, God. You have given us this man.'”
Mr. Mandela himself has always been sanguine about his own mortality. In an opinion article after a health scare in 1996, while he was serving as president, Mr. Mandela wrote, “I have long passed my teens; and the distance to my final destination is shorter than the road I have trudged over the years! What nature has decreed should not generate undue insecurity.” Mr. Mandela himself has always been sanguine about his own mortality. In an opinion article after a health scare in 1996, while he was serving as president, Mr. Mandela wrote: “I have long passed my teens; and the distance to my final destination is shorter than the road I have trudged over the years! What nature has decreed should not generate undue insecurity.”
Details about Mr. Mandela’s health have been tightly held. President Jacob Zuma released a brief statement Monday saying that Mr. Mandela’s condition was unchanged: serious but stable. Details about Mr. Mandela’s health have been tightly held. President Jacob Zuma released a brief statement on Monday saying Mr. Mandela’s condition was unchanged: serious but stable.

This article has been revised to reflect the following correction:

This article has been revised to reflect the following correction:

Correction: June 11, 2013Correction: June 11, 2013

An earlier version of this article incorrectly identified the daughter of Nelson Mandela who is South Africa’s ambassador to Argentina. She is Zenani Dlamini, not Zindzi.

An earlier version of this article incorrectly identified the daughter of Nelson Mandela who is South Africa’s ambassador to Argentina. She is Zenani Dlamini, not Zindzi.