Nelson Mandela’s daughter had coronavirus

Zindzi Mandela, the daughter of South African anti-apartheid leaders Nelson and Winnie Mandela, tested positive for coronavirus the day she died.

Her son Zondwa Mandela today revealed his mother did have the disease – but it may not be what caused her death aged 59 in Johannesburg on Monday.

Zindzi is the world’s highest profile victim of coronavirus, which has killed more than 4,400 people in South Africa alone.

Her son Zondwa Mandela told state broadcaster SABC: ‘My mother did in fact test positive for Covid-19 on the day of her passing. 

Zindzi Mandela (pictured in 2013), the daughter of South African anti-apartheid leaders Nelson and Winnie Mandela, tested positive for coronavirus the day she died 

‘Although, this doesn’t therefore mean that she died of Covid-related complications, but simply that she tested positive for it.

He added: ‘Simply by the virtue that there was a positive test, we are therefore obligated to function and work within the framework of the existing regulation related to such cases.’ 

Zindzi Mandela, the daughter of South African anti-apartheid leaders Nelson and Winnie Mandela, died on Monday morning in hospital.  

Zindzi rose to international prominence when she read out Nelson Mandela’s rejection of then-president P.W. Botha’s offer for freedom in 1985. 

The white minority government offered to release Nelson Mandela from prison if he denounced violence perpetrated by his movement, the Africa National Congress, against apartheid.

She read his letter rejecting the offer at a packed public meeting which was broadcast around the world.

The 59-year-old was serving as South Africa’s ambassador to Denmark.

Nelson Mandela escorts his daughter Zenzekile "Zinzi" Mandela on her wedding day

Nelson Mandela escorts his daughter Zenzekile ‘Zinzi’ Mandela on her wedding day

‘This is untimely. She still had a role to play in the transformation of our own society and a bigger role to play even in the African National Congress,’ said ANC spokesman Pule Mabe. 

The Mandela Foundation posted earlier that on this day in 1969, Nelson’s eldest son, Madiba Thembekile – Zindzi’s half brother – died in a three-car collision, which left another four people dead.   

The fourth of Mandela’s children to die  

Only two of Nelson’s children, Zemani and Pumla Mandela, are still alive. 

Makaziwe, his first child, died in 1948, aged just 18-months-old.

On the same day as his sister, in 1969, Nelson’s eldest son, Madiba Thembekile Mandela, died in a car crash. 

In 2005, Nelson’s son Makgatho died of AIDS, leading to the president announcing the need for publicity around the disease. 

‘Let us give publicity to HIV/AIDS and not hide it, because the only way to make it appear like a normal illness like, like cancer, is always to come out and say somebody has died because of HIV/AIDS, and people will stop regarding it as something extraordinary.’

Zindzi’s other half-brother, attorney Makgatho Mandela, died of AIDS in 2005. 

His death led to an impassioned statement from then President Mandela, who called on the public to ‘give publicity to AIDS’ and to ‘not hide it’.  

Another of her siblings died in 1948 at just 18-months old. 

Last year Zindzi stirred controversy by calling for the return of the white-owned land to South Africa’s dispossessed Black majority.

‘Dear Apartheid Apologists, your time is over. You will not rule again. We do not fear you. Finally the land is ours,’ she tweeted in June last year.  

President Cyril Ramaphosa led the tributes to Zindzion Monday. 

‘Zindzi Mandela was a household name nationally and internationally, who during our years of struggle, brought home the inhumanity of the apartheid system and the unshakeable resolve of our fight for freedom,’ he said. 

‘After our liberation, she became an icon of the task we began of transforming our society and stepping into spaces and opportunities that had been denied to generations of South Africans.

‘Her spirit joins Tata Madiba and Mama Winnie in a reunion of leaders to whom we owe our freedom.’    

South Africa’s foreign affairs minister Naledi Pandor has expressed shock at Mandela’s death, describing her as a heroine.

Zindzi's other half-brother, attorney Makgatho Mandela, died of AIDS in 2005

Nelson's eldest son, Madiba Thembekile (pictured as a child) who died in a three-car collision on this day in 1969

Only two of Nelson’s children, Zemani and Pumla Mandela, are still alive. Madiba Thembekile (right) died on this day in 1969 and Zindzi’s other sibling Makgatho Mandela (left) died of AIDS in Johannesburg in 2005. Another of Mandela’s children died as an infant 

‘Zindzi will not only be remembered as a daughter of our struggle heroes, Tata Nelson and Mama Winnie Mandela, but as a struggle heroine in her own right. She served South Africa well,’ said Pandor.

Zindzi was born in the midst of the anti-apartheid struggle, the same year that her father’s African National Congress created its armed wing. Zindzi, her mother, and her sister Zenani, faced harassment by the ruling National Part while her father was imprisoned on Robben Island, the BBC reported.  

In a 1995 interview with Thandy magazine, Zindzi said: ‘I am something of a rebel.’ 

‘I never knew a normal life,’ she added.  

Zindzi Mandela reads the refusal of her father, Nelson Mandela to leave prison after South African President P.W. Botha offered him conditional release on Feb. 10, 1985 in Johannesburg, South Africa

Zindzi Mandela reads the refusal of her father, Nelson Mandela to leave prison after South African President P.W. Botha offered him conditional release on Feb. 10, 1985 in Johannesburg, South Africa

Zindzi Mandela speaks on stage flanked by her sister Makaziwe during the Global Citizen Festival: Mandela 100 at FNB Stadium on December 2, 2018 in Johannesburg, South Africa

Zindzi Mandela speaks on stage flanked by her sister Makaziwe during the Global Citizen Festival: Mandela 100 at FNB Stadium on December 2, 2018 in Johannesburg, South Africa

Catherine Duchess of Cambridge meets Zindzi Mandela (right) at the film premiere of  'Mandela: long walk to freedom' in London on 5 December, 2013

Catherine Duchess of Cambridge meets Zindzi Mandela (right) at the film premiere of  ‘Mandela: long walk to freedom’ in London on 5 December, 2013

Nelson Mandela with daughter Zinzi Mandela Hlongwane (back) at his birthday party in Johannesburg, 1995

Nelson Mandela with daughter Zinzi Mandela Hlongwane (back) at his birthday party in Johannesburg, 1995

‘The day I buried the father of my child, my own father was released from prison’    

Only two of Nelson’s children, Zemani and Pumla, are still alive. Nelson Mandela died in 2013 at the age of 95.  

The Nelson Mandela Foundation is currently consulting with the Mandela family. The Danish Foreign Ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment from the MailOnline.  

 Zindzi is survived by her husband and four children.

Who was Zindzi Mandela? 

Zindzi Mandela was born in 1960, just a year-and-a-half before her father was first incarcerated for anti-government activities. 

Her early life was marred with the constant imprisonment of her father and occasional removal of her mother for months-long prison sentences. 

Care for the young Zindzi often fell to her older sister Zenani in these early years.  

When Zindzi was 17 years old she moved with her mother who had been banished to Free State. 

In 1985, Nelson was offered a release from prison by President PW Botha, on the condition that he ‘unconditionally rejected violence as a political weapon’.

With both Winnie and Nelson in prison, Zindzi delivered his rejection of the offer at a public meeting. 

The letter read: ‘What freedom am I being offered while the organisation of the people [ANC] remains banned? Only free men can negotiate. A prisoner cannot enter into contracts.’ 

In her personal life, Zindzi was married twice, first to businessman Zwelibanzi Hlongwane, whom she married in 1980.  

Her second marriage, in March 2013, was to Molapo Motlhajwa, of the African National Defence Force.

She also had four children, who she noted were from four different fathers: Zoleka Mandela, (1980), Zondwa Mandela (1985), Bambatha Mandela (1989) and Zwelabo Mandela (1992). 

Read more at DailyMail.co.uk