Nelson Mandela is unresponsive and his immediate family is now discussing whether to withdraw treatment, it has been claimed.
The
94-year-old has been in hospital for two weeks battling a recurring
lung infection, but previous statements have indicated that Mr Mandela’s
health is improving.
According
to a new source, Mr Mandela’s liver and kidney functions are down to 50
per cent and he has not opened his eyes for days.
New claims: Reports of Mandela's improving
condition may have been false after a source reveals Mr Mandela has been
'unresponsive' for days
He has also had two recent procedures, one to repair a bleeding ulcer and another to insert a tube into his body, CBS News reports.
This
information indicates that Mr Mandela’s situation is much more much
more serious than has been reported by South African authorities.
In an interview last week, South African president Jacob Zuma said Mr Mandela was responding better to treatment.
Marking
the 49th anniversary of the sentencing of the former president to life
in prison in 1964, last Wednesday Mr Zuma said: ‘We are very happy with
the progress that he is now making following a difficult last few days.’
Following
the interview with the ANC leader, a government spokesman told local
radio that Mr Mandela remained in a 'serious but stable' condition.
Contradiction: South African President and ANC
leader Jacob Zuma, pictured with Mr Mandela in April, has reported that
the apartheid hero's health is improving
As recent as Thursday, one of
Nelson Mandela’s grandsons said he hoped Mandela would be discharged
shortly as his health was improving.
‘Positively
we can say that he has been getting better and better each day and
hopefully he'll be coming home soon,’ Ndaba Mandela told South African
newspaper The Star.
However, details about the night Mr Mandela arrived in hospital two weeks ago have emerged.
According
to CBS News, Mr Mandela went into cardiac arrest the night he was taken
to Pretoria Hospital and had to be resuscitated.
As
Mr Mandela was driven to the hospital the ambulance suffered an engine
failure and was forced to wait for over 40 minutes for a replacement.
Family worries: Winnie and Zindzi Mandela,
ex-wife and daughter of Nelson Mandela, pictured with an unidentified
man at the hospital last week, are said to be discussing whether to
continue the 94-year-old's treatments
When the second ambulance
arrived Mr Mandela had to be transferred - in winter temperatures- to a
second vehicle which could have had an impact on his condition,
according to a cardiologist interviewed by CBS.
South
African government officials have said ‘great care was taken to ensure
that Mandela's health was not compromised and that his doctors were
satisfied the former president suffered no harm.’
Mandela, who turns 95 next month, is being treated at a Pretoria hospital for a recurring lung infection.
The
hospital stay is his fourth since December and there is a growing
realisation among South Africa's 53million people that they will one day
have to say goodbye to the father of the 'Rainbow Nation' that Mandela
tried to forge from the ashes of apartheid.
DAILYMAIL
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