Nelson Mandela 'recovering well'
2011-02-11 10:15
Johannesburg - Former president Nelson Mandela has recovered from a recent health scare, his daughter Zindzi Mandela Hlongwane told Reuters.
"He is recovering very well. Sense of humour, he eats, spends time with his grandchildren. He's very well thank you," she said, adding that he will closely monitor Manny Pacquiao's next world title defence.
Mandela, a keen boxer in his youth, is a good friend of boxing great Muhammad Ali and has always kept an eagle eye on contemporary fighters, according to his daughter.
"My father is still very much aware of who the fighters are," Zindzi told Reuters after Filipino Pacquiao and American Shane Mosley held a news conference at a hotel in Beverly Hills to discuss their May 7 WBO welterweight bout.
Mandela Day
"I was just telling both Shane Mosley and Manny Pacquiao... my father sits up to watch a fight (on television) and he still loves the sport with a passion."
Mandela, 92, started boxing while studying at Fort Hare University in Eastern Cape and he famously shadow boxed behind bars while spending 27 years in prison.
"I grew up knowing that my father was a boxer," said Zindzi, who is in Los Angeles to promote Mandela Day which coincides with her father's birthday on July 18.
"We always had those pictures at home of him shadow boxing and I knew the gym where he used to go and practise and spar and so on.
"When he came out of prison, he was already a grown man and he couldn't go back to the sport but we used to go to boxing bouts together."
Zindzi said her father especially savoured the success of South African fighters Baby Jake Matlala and Dingaan Thobela, who was nicknamed 'Rose of Soweto', in the 1980s and 1990s.
Respect for boxers
Of the contemporary boxers, she said Mandela was particularly impressed by eight-times world champion Pacquiao, who won a seat in his national congress last year and is revered for his humanitarian work in the Philippines.
"My father has a respect for anybody like Manny who stands up and takes a stand and is willing to serve his people, because that is what he (Mandela) represents," Zindzi said.
Mandela, who has not been seen in public since the soccer World Cup final in July last year, created a media frenzy in South Africa when he was hospitalised for a respiratory infection a fortnight ago.
President Jacob Zuma said during his State of the Nation address on Thursday that Mandela was comfortable and receiving good care at home.