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World pays homage to Mandela in mass memorial service

World leaders, from U.S. President Barack Obama to Cuba\'s Raul Castro, will pay homage to Nelson Mandela at a mass memorial in South Africa on Tuesday that will recall his gift for bringing enemies together across political and racial divides.
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December 9, 2013

World leaders, from U.S. President Barack Obama to Cuba's Raul Castro, will pay homage to Nelson Mandela at a mass memorial in South Africa on Tuesday that will recall his gift for bringing enemies together across political and racial divides.

Obama and Castro, whose countries maintain an ideological enmity lasting more than 50 years, are among the designated orators at a Johannesburg soccer stadium where 23 years earlier Mandela – freshly freed from apartheid jail – was hailed by cheering supporters as the hope for a new South Africa.

Coinciding with U.N.-designated Human Rights Day, the memorial service for Mandela in the 95,000-seat Soccer City stadium is the centerpiece of a week of mourning for the globally-admired statesman, who died on Thursday aged 95.

Tens of thousands of ordinary South Africans will be joining scores of leaders from across the world to honor a leader whose life of imprisonment and political struggle made him a global symbol of integrity and forgiveness.

The fact that the visiting leaders – more than 90 are expected – include some from nations still locked in antagonism, such as Cuba and the United States, adds piquancy and resonance to the homage being held at the gigantic bowl-shaped stadium, the venue of the 2010 World Cup final.

Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe and former British Prime Minister Tony Blair will both be there. Blair has called Mugabe a dictator who should have been removed from power. Mugabe has called Blair an imperialist and once told him to “go to hell”.

Such antagonisms will be put on mute on Tuesday as the life of someone who put his faith in reconciliation into practice to successfully unite a multi-racial nation is remembered.

“What he did in life, that's what he's doing in death, he's bringing people together from all walks of life, from the different sides of opinion, political belief, religion,” Zelda la Grange, Mandela's former personal assistant, told Reuters.

“IMMORTAL LEGACY”

South African officials had initially said Iranian President Hassan Rouhani would also be there, raising the possibility of a first face-to-face meeting with Obama. But Rouhani's name was not on an official list of attendees.

A flock of celebrities are also expected, including U.S. talk show host Oprah Winfrey, singers Peter Gabriel and Bono, supermodel Naomi Campbell and entrepreneur Richard Branson.

While Tuesday's event will reflect Mandela's global stature, ordinary South Africans will also pack the stadium to hail their beloved “Tata Madiba”. Madiba is Mandela's clan name and “Tata” is the Xhosa word for father.

Huge screens in three other soccer stadiums in Johannesburg, South Africa's largest city and commercial hub, will relay the memorial service to hundreds of thousands more mourners, with others following from around the country.

A huge security operation will be in force, private cars are banned from the area around the Soccer City stadium and citizens are being asked to travel there by public transport.

U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon will also speak, and will hold Mandela's example up as a beacon of justice, equality and human rights to be followed to create a better world.

“The people of South Africa and the entire world have lost a hero. His legacy is profound, immortal and will continue to guide the work of the United Nations,” Ban said in a tribute at the Nelson Mandela Centre of Memory in Johannesburg on Monday.

SPOTLIGHT ON ZUMA

South African President Jacob Zuma will give the keynote address. He is hoping the wave of emotion triggered by Mandela's passing can buoy his African National Congress (ANC) government as it faces popular protests over persisting poverty, crime and unemployment six months ahead of elections.

The mourning for Mandela has distracted attention from corruption scandals affecting Zuma and his administration. But memories of the former president's five-year tenure up to 1999 have reminded many just how distant Zuma's South Africa still is from the “Rainbow Nation” ideal of shared prosperity and social peace that Mandela proclaimed after his 1994 election.

South Africa remains one of the most unequal societies on the planet.

Besides Obama, three former U.S. presidents – Jimmy Carter, Bill Clinton and George W. Bush – will also be in Johannesburg.

Israel, which many South Africans criticize for arming the apartheid rulers who kept Mandela behind bars for 27 years, is sending neither its prime minister nor president, Israeli officials said.

Pope Francis will also not be there, sending an African cardinal in his place.

After Tuesday's event, Mandela's remains will lie in state for three days at the Union Buildings in Pretoria, where he was sworn in as president in 1994.

He will then be buried on Sunday, December 15, in Qunu, his ancestral home in the rolling, windswept hills of the Eastern Cape province, 700 km (450 miles) south of Johannesburg.

Only a few world leaders are due to attend the Qunu ceremony, which is likely to be a more intimate family affair.

Writing by Pascal Fletcher; Editing by

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