S.Africa’s Mandela recovering from collapsed lung

JOHANNESBURG, (Reuters) – Former South African  President Nelson Mandela is recovering from a collapsed lung and  could be released from hospital as early as today, a source  close to Mandela told Reuters yesterday.

The 92-year-old anti-apartheid icon was admitted to a  Johannesburg hospital on Wednesday for what his foundation  described as routine tests.
“Mandela was treated by military doctors and should be  discharged tomorrow,” the source said, asking not to be named.

There has been no official word from the hospital,  government or Mandela’s foundation on the nature of his illness.

Nelson Mandela

The Nelson Mandela Foundation declined to comment on his  health yesterday but said in an earlier statement: “He is in  no danger and is in good spirits.”
President Jacob Zuma and the ruling African National  Congress appealed for calm yesterday after the hospitalisation  set off speculation in local media about Mandela’s health.

“President Mandela is comfortable and is well looked after  by a good team of medical specialists,” Zuma said in a  statement. The ANC said there was no cause for alarm.
“He is a 92-year-old and will have ailments associated with  his age, and the fact that he stayed the night should not  suggest the worst,” ANC spokesman Jackson Mthembu said.
According to the University of Maryland Medical Center, a  collapsed lung, pneumothorax, is “the collection of air in the  space around the lungs”, making it more difficult to breathe.

Treatment can vary from allowing the body to repair the  problem on its own to placing a tube in the chest to relieve the  pressure.
Several members of Mandela’s family, including his wife  Graca Machel, visited the hospital after his admission, Reuters  witnesses said.
Police were called in to control traffic at the Milpark  Hospital in a leafy Johannesburg suburb as scores of  journalists, photographers and television crews converged on it.

LOOKING FRAIL

Mandela has not been seen in public since the soccer World  Cup final in July last year.
Mandela retired from public life in June 2004 before his  86th birthday, telling his compatriots: “Don’t call me, I’ll  call you.”
Since then he has rarely appeared in public and when he did,  he appeared increasingly frail. In addition to the World Cup,  Mandela appeared at a couple of ANC rallies before general  elections in 2009.

Mandela was treated in the 1980s for tuberculosis and later  had an operation to repair damage to his eyes. In 2001 he had   treatment for prostate cancer. South African Nobel Peace Prize laureate Desmond Tutu said  this week he had met Mandela last week. “He was all right, I  mean, he’s 92, you know. And he’s frail.”    Tutu told reporters in Bloemfontein yesterday: “What more  do we want from him? We want him to remain forever, but you  know… anything can happen,” the SAPA news agency reported.
Mandela — known by his clan name of Madiba in South Africa  — has been on holiday with his wife, local media reported.