US News

Elder Bush announces death of Nelson Mandela — except Mandela isn’t dead

Former president George H.W. Bush announced the death of Nelson Mandela on Sunday morning when his spokesman sent out a statement of mourning.

There was just one problem with the gracious letter: Mandela is not actually dead.

Bush spokesman Jim McGrath tweeted later Sunday that it was his mistake and he had misread a news flash on the Washington Post’s website.

“Stupid mistake by me,” McGrath wrote. “Apologies to all.”

The statement read, according to US Today: “Barbara and I mourn the passing of one of the greatest believers in freedom we have had the privilege to know. As President, I watched in wonder as Nelson Mandela had the remarkable capacity to forgive his jailers following 26 years of wrongful imprisonment — setting a powerful example of redemption and grace for us all. He was a man of tremendous moral courage, who changed the course of history in his country. Barbara and I had great respect for President Mandela, and send our condolences to his family and countrymen.”

The South African presidency denied the statement, saying Mandela is still alive, according to BNO News.

“It is clearly incorrect,” South African presidential spokesman Mac Maharaj said. “We see it as an error on [Bush’s] side.”

Maharaj said his people are not making a big deal about it.

Mandela went home in an ambulance on Sunday after nearly three months in a hospital that became the focus of a global outpouring of concern, but authorities said the health of the former South African president remained critical and sometimes unstable.

The return of the 95-year-old leader of the anti-apartheid movement to his home in an affluent neighborhood of Johannesburg allows his family to share time with him in a more intimate setting.

The office of South African President Jacob Zuma said Mandela will receive the same level of intensive care that he did in the hospital, administered by the same doctors.