Former Secretary General of the Commonwealth, Chief
Emeka Anyaoku, has described the death of Winnie Madikizela-Mandela as the exit
of a true champion of the struggle for the freedom and dignity of Africans
against the inhuman policy of apartheid that existed in South Africa.
Anyaoku, in a statement issued on Wednesday, pointed
out that Winnie was for many years, the soul and public face of the
anti-apartheid struggle while her husband Nelson Mandela was in prison.
He said: “Her sacrifice to the struggle was immense.
For example, she suffered banishment by the apartheid regime to a solitary area
in Brandfort for a number of years.
“I remember
the iconic and unforgettable picture of Winnie and Nelson Mandela walking hand
in hand from Victor Verster prison on the day of Nelson’s release in February
1990 after 27 years as a prisoner.
“And I recall with nostalgia her grace and dignity
at my very first official dinner as Commonwealth Secretary-General which my wife
and I hosted in London on July 5, 1990, in honour of Nelson and Winnie Mandela.
“Winnie’s passing is indeed an exit of a true
champion of the struggle for the freedom and dignity of Africans against the
inhuman policy of apartheid that existed in South Africa then.
“My wife and I join her two daughters, Zenani and
Zindziwa, and all the people of South Africa in mourning the demise of a woman
who, notwithstanding her human frailties, was indeed a great historic figure.”
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