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Nelson Mandela death: Neath MP Peter Hain leads tributes | |
(35 minutes later) | |
Peter Hain MP, has led tributes to South Africa's first black president Nelson Mandela, who has died age 95. | |
The Neath MP, whose family fled South Africa because of its support for Mr Mandela, described him as a "friend and a hero" and the "icon of all icons". | |
The National Assembly's flags will fly at half mast on Friday and again on the day of Mr Mandela's funeral. | |
First Minister Carwyn Jones said Mr Mandela was one of the "greatest figures of modern times". | |
Mr Mandela had been receiving intense home-based medical care for a lung infection after three months in hospital. | Mr Mandela had been receiving intense home-based medical care for a lung infection after three months in hospital. |
In a statement on South African national TV, South African president Jacob Zuma said Mr Mandela had "departed" and was at peace. | |
"Our nation has lost its greatest son," Mr Zuma said. | "Our nation has lost its greatest son," Mr Zuma said. |
Following the news, Mr Hain led tributes to the Noble peace prize winner. | |
Mr Hain said there had long been a bond between Wales and the man known to friends as "Madiba". | |
He cited the anti-apartheid demonstrations against the then all-white Springboks rugby team's game in Swansea in 1969. | |
The former Welsh Secretary also fondly recalled Mr Mandela's first and only visit to Wales in 1998, when he was awarded the Freedom of Cardiff. | |
He said: "Cardiff that day experienced a vintage Mandela performance. | |
"He ignored my guiding arm on his elbow and stopped at a group of primary school children sparkling in Welsh national dress. | |
"As the queue of VIPs waited, sweating in the unusually hot weather, he began conducting the children to Twinkle, Twinkle Little Star. | |
"I later learned that it was the absence of his children that he missed most in all his long years of imprisonment on Robben Island." | |
Mr Hain, whose family's associations with the anti-Apartheid movement saw them blacklisted by the South African authorities in the 1960s, also described Mr Mandela as "a friend and a hero". | |
Recalling Mr Mandela's 2000 visit to the Labour Party conference in Brighton, he said: "As I escorted him inside, he asked his usual question: 'How's the family?'. | |
"On hearing my mother was in Swansea's Morriston Hospital with a fractured femur, he stopped immediately and said that he must speak to her. | |
"Out came my mobile and, when she answered from her hospital ward, she was greeted with: 'Hullo. Nelson Mandela here, do you remember me?' | |
"That's what made him so extraordinary - he remained above all a people's person which is highly unusual amongst global leaders or celebrities of his stature." | |
First Minister Carwyn Jones led tributes from the Welsh Assembly. | |
He said: "Nelson Mandela can be truly described as one of the greatest figures of modern times. | |
"Not many people can claim to have changed the history of their nation for the better, by bringing together what was then a bitterly divided society. | |
"His message of forgiveness, of reconciliation for the sake of a better future is one all of us should follow." | |
He added: "When President Mandela visited Wales in 1998, he thanked the Welsh people for their support - it was a moment we will never forget. | |
"But for all that we did, we didn't have to confront apartheid on a daily basis. | |
"We didn't have to run the risk of imprisonment or worse. | |
"Nelson Mandela faced his struggle with dignity and without bitterness and that is why he will be remembered for generations to come." | |
Leader of the Welsh Conservatives, Andrew RT Davies AM, said: "Nelson Mandela was - and will always be - a global inspiration. | |
"His was a life that has defined what it means to be truly great." | |
Leanne Wood, Plaid Cymru leader, said the world would mourn "a great man who has inspired generations and whose achievements will last forever". | |
The assembly's presiding officer, Rosemary Butler, said flags would fly at half mast on Friday and on the day of Mr Mandela's funeral. | |
She said: "These days we often apply the description 'great' to people but Nelson Mandela truly was a great human being." |