President Goodluck Jonathan; United
States President Barrack Obama; and about 58 other foreign heads of
state and government are expected to attend either the memorial ceremony
or the state funeral of former South African President, Nelson Mandela. The funeral is expected to hold in South
Africa in the coming week, a foreign ministry spokesman said.
He said the final number of persons who would attend either Tuesday’s memorial in Johannesburg or the funeral in Qunu next Sunday would be confirmed in due course. According to online news reports, Jonathan will leave Abuja on Monday (today) evening to join other world leaders in South Africa at events leading up to the burial of Mandela. He is expected to also attend the Memorial Service on Tuesday at the FNB Stadium in Johannesburg and will be accompanied by the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Prof. Viola Onwuliri.
He said the final number of persons who would attend either Tuesday’s memorial in Johannesburg or the funeral in Qunu next Sunday would be confirmed in due course. According to online news reports, Jonathan will leave Abuja on Monday (today) evening to join other world leaders in South Africa at events leading up to the burial of Mandela. He is expected to also attend the Memorial Service on Tuesday at the FNB Stadium in Johannesburg and will be accompanied by the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Prof. Viola Onwuliri.
International leaders, global figures
and celebrities will join 95,000 ordinary South Africans at the memorial
service at the FNB Stadium in Soweto, where Mandela made his final
major public appearance during the 2010 football World Cup.
The event is likely to be one of the
biggest of such gatherings of international dignitaries in recent years.
The South African government said 59 leaders had so far confirmed they
would be attending, an indication of the special place Mandela held in
people’s hearts across the world, officials say. Among those on the list are UN Secretary
General Ban Ki-moon; German President Joachim Gauck, EU Commission
President Jose Manuel Barroso; Dutch King Willem-Alexander; and Crown
Prince Felipe of Spain.
Three former US presidents, George W
Bush, Bill Clinton and Jimmy Carter, will join President Obama and First
Lady, Michelle Obama. Brazil’s President Dilma Rousseff,
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas and India’s Pranab Mukherjee are
also expected at the memorial/funeral . Iran’s President Hassan Rouhani
has not yet confirmed whether he will travel.
A smaller number of international
dignitaries, including the Prince of Wales will attend the burial in the
Eastern Cape village of Qunu, where the late president grew up. Leading celebrities in the
anti-apartheid movement, Peter Gabriel and Bono, are also expected to
attend as are former international leaders such as Marti Ahtisaari who,
along with Mandela, were part of a group known as The Elders, promoting
peace and human rights.
Meanwhile, three extra stadiums have
been made available for those wanting to attend Tuesday’s national
memorial service in Johannesburg for Mandela, online news website, News24 reports.
While the main service would be held at
the FNB Stadium in Soweto, overflow stadiums had been provided due to
the fact that not all mourners could be accommodated there, the city
said in a statement on Sunday.
The three extra venues are Ellis Park,
and the Orlando and Dobsonville stadiums, where the national memorial
service will be broadcast live. The event is set to start on Tuesday at
11:00.
Free public transport has been
reportedly arranged by the government and park-and-rides to accommodate
mourners, and ensure that they are able to get to the stadiums on time. The city warned that no cars would be
allowed near the FNB Stadium, known to locals as the Calabash, and that
roads around the venue would be closed from midnight on Monday, with a
“total shutdown” from early on Tuesday morning.
In a statement, it said, “Mourners are
urged to choose which stadium they want to attend the national memorial
service and take heed of the details… in respect of travelling to the
different stadiums, and plan their trips accordingly.
“Entrance to FNB Stadium is on a first come, first serve basis.”
Once it was full mourners would be
directed to other stadiums, and should listen to their local radio
stations and follow social media.
“Mourners are urged to arrive early at
the stadiums. [They] will open at 07:00. Parking venues and bus services
will be operating from 06:00.”
It said normal bus services offered by Rea Vaya, Metrobus and Putco in and around Johannesburg could be disrupted.
With hymns and eulogies, South Africans
of all colors and creeds remembered Mandela in a day of prayers on
Sunday, holding him up as an example of freedom and forgiveness to build
a better nation and world.
At churches, mosques, synagogues and
community halls from the Limpopo River to the Cape, millions offered
praise. They reflected on a man celebrated as “Father of the Nation” and
as a global beacon of integrity, rectitude and reconciliation.
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