Protest against auction of Mandela’s prison keys

An American auction house wants to auction the key to Nelson Mandela’s cell on Robben Island. The Nobel Peace Prize laureate was imprisoned there for 18 years. In South Africa there is resistance to the planned auction.

Nelson Mandela (left) was imprisoned on Robben Island, a prison off Cape Town, for 18 years. The photo shows him and former US President Bill Clinton visiting Mandela’s former cell on March 27, 1998.

Scott Applewhite / AP

(dpa)

In South Africa there is a protest against the planned auctioning of a key for the prison cell of the first black President of the Cape Republic, Nelson Mandela. Culture Minister Nathi Mthethwa emphasized in a statement published on Friday: “This key belongs to the South Africans.” He responded to media reports that an American auction house had received the key from a former guard Mandela. He has to explain how he got his possession.

Mandela, who had received the Nobel Peace Prize for his work of reconciliation after the abolition of racist apartheid, was imprisoned for 18 years on the prison island Robben Island off Cape Town. He was only released on February 11, 1990 after a total of 27 years in prison. As a memorial, Robben Island is now on the World Heritage List and is an important symbol of the fight against oppression in the apartheid era.

“The master key still exists – we don’t know whether it has been copied,” the Minister of Culture told the TV broadcaster eNCA. So far it is unclear whether other objects in addition to the key have reached the auction house from the prison island. “We will fight to bring him back,” announced Mthethwa.

source site-111