Nelson Mandela leaves £2.5m estate

Former South African president and anti-apartheid hero Nelson Mandela left an estate worth £2.5 million to family members, the ruling African National Congress, former staff and several local schools, according to a reading of his will yesterday.
Nelson Mandela left money to his staff, including his chef. Picture: GettyNelson Mandela left money to his staff, including his chef. Picture: Getty
Nelson Mandela left money to his staff, including his chef. Picture: Getty

The will was expected to set off fresh squabbling among the family over the Nobel Peace Prize laureate’s financial legacy.

Deputy Chief Justice Dikgang Moseneke said he was not aware of any possible wrangle over the provisional 46 million rand estate, although when the will was read to family the mood was “charged with emotion”.

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“I am not aware of any contest of any type and the will has been duly lodged and accepted,” Mr Moseneke said.

Mr Mandela’s third wife, Graca Machel, is entitled to half the estate under South African marital law but could waive her claims and opt for specified assets that include properties in her native Mozambique.

Ms Machel has not made a decision on whether to waive her rights, Mr Moseneke said.

Some of the estate would be split between three trusts set up by Mr Mandela, including a family trust designed to provide for his more than 30 children, grandchildren and great grandchildren.

Each of Mr Mandela’s children and some of his grand-children received about £185,000. His upscale Johannesburg house, where he spent most of his life after being freed from apartheid jails, would be home to his deceased son Makgatho’s children.

The ANC, which was Mr Mandela’s political “home”, could receive a portion of his royalties from books and other commercial outlets using his name and image.

Mr Mandela’s staff, including his long-time personal assistant Zelda Le Grange, also shared in the fortune, with about £2,700 each.

“It really makes me happy. I didn’t think Tata was thinking of leaving something for me,” said Mr Mandela’s chef Xoliswa Ndoyiya, using the Xhosa word for “father”.

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Mr Mandela, who died in December at the age of 95, left an estate that also included a modest dwelling in his rural Eastern Cape home province and royalties from book sales, including his autobiography, Long Walk to Freedom.

More visibly, his legacy includes a potent political and moral brand that some of his grandchildren and great-grandchildren have already used to market everything from clothing to reality TV.