A continuing feud in the Mandela
family which has made headlines in the past year has taken another turn
with a report that Mandla Mandela was locked out of the family's
homestead by relatives four days before his grandfather, Nelson Mandela,
was buried there.
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| Nelson Mandela's grandson Mandla is reportedly caught in a family feud |
Mandla is also reported to have found his home on the Mandela estate without electricity and water on the day of his grandfather's burial.
The Johannesburg
Times reported that locks at Nelson Mandela's home in the Eastern Cape
hamlet of Qunu were changed shortly after his eldest daughter, Makaziwe
Mandela, arrived there last week.
At the time, Mandla Mandela was
keeping vigil next to his grandfather's coffin while the body lay in
state at the Union Buildings in Pretoria for three days.
He escorted the coffin to Qunu on Saturday for Mr Mandela's funeral the following day.
Mandla
Mandela's spokesman said: "He doesn't want to confirm nor deny the
report. He wants to focus on promoting and upholding the legacy of his
grandfather going forward."
Mandla and Makaziwe have been involved
in a bitter public spat over the control of Mr Mandela's legacy and
leadership of the fractured family.
The newspaper report said that since Mandela's death on December 5:
Water and lights at Mandla's house on the Mandela estate were
disconnected late on Saturday. The occupants, including Mandla, had no
water when they awoke on Sunday;
Makaziwe had told Mandla that he must remove his cattle, pigs and dogs from the homestead;
Relatives, politicians and religious leaders aligned to Mandla were sidelined and refused accreditation for Sunday's funeral;
Traditional family rituals, scheduled to be held in Mvezo, a town near
Qunu, where Mandla is Madiba clan chief, were cancelled.
No
transport to the funeral was provided for Mandla's mother, Nolusapho, or
for her sister. They were brought to the funeral after a member of the
family sent a text message to Mandla telling him of the situation.
Nolusapho, who in the early 1970s had been with Nelson Mandela's now
deceased son, was reportedly in tears.
A further outbreak of hostilities is expected over Mandela's will, the contents of which have not been made public.
Makaziwe, who is said to wield great influence in the family, oversaw the family's preparations for Mandela's funeral.
Makaziwe
and Mandla locked horns earlier this year when Mandla moved the remains
of his father and two other relatives to Mvezo, Mandela's birthplace
and where Mandla is tribal chief.
With Makaziwe
spearheading the campaign to have the remains exhumed, Mandla was forced
by a court order to return the remains to Qunu, where Mandela grew up
and where he had expressed a wish to be buried.
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