South Africa's former president, Nelson Mandela, remains “quite ill” and is unable to speak thus using facial expressions to communicate as he receives intensive medical care at home, AFP reported his former wife as stating Sunday.
Winnie Madikizela-Mandela said the 95-year-old former president was not on life support, but he was no longer talking “because of all the tubes that are in his mouth to clear (fluid from) the lungs” and prevent infection form returning.
“He can't actually articulate anything as a result,” she told The Sunday Independent. “He communicates with the face, you see. But the doctors have told us they hope to recover his voice.”
Mandela was discharged in a critical condition on September 1 to his home in Johannesburg’s upmarket Houghton suburb after nearly three months in hospital for a lung infection.
“He remains very sensitive to any germs, so he has to be kept literally sterile. The bedroom there (in Houghton) is like an ICU ward,” she explained.
“He remains quite ill, but thank God the doctors were able to pull him through from that (last) infection,” she said in the interview which was also carried in the Sunday Independent's sister papers.
Mandela, who spent 27 years in apartheid jail before becoming South Africa’s first black leader, has faced several health scares. His most recent 86-day hospital stay was his longest since he walked free from prison in 1990.
Mandela has been in and out of hospital since last year with lung-related complications. His Johannesburg home has been reconfigured for him to receive intensive care on his release from hospital in a critical and at times unstable condition.
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