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Tuesday, 21 July 2015

South Africa’s Tutu out of hospital after infection


South African Archbishop Desmond Tutu has been discharged from hospital after a week of treatment for a persistent infection, his family said Tuesday, adding doctors had ordered him to rest.
The 83-year-old Nobel peace laureate was on a course of intravenous antibiotics to treat the infection, which was not connected with the prostate cancer that he has lived with for 15 years.
His daughter Mpho Tutu paid tribute to his medical team, who prescribed a period of rest to complete his recovery.
File: South Africa's Nobel Peace Prize laureate Desmond Tutu (R) and staff from the Desmond and Leah Tutu Legacy hold up a poster wishing Nelson Mandela a happy birthday at the Marconi Beam Public Primary School in Cape Town on 18 July 2013. Nelson Mandela spent his 95th birthday in hospital Thursday but his health was "steadily improving", the South African presidency said, as people around the world honoured his legacy with charitable acts.  With a wave of good deeds planned to mark Nelson Mandela Day, South Africans awoke to word that their national hero was getting better six fraught weeks after he was admitted to hospital with a recurring lung infection.  AFP PHOTO
File: South Africa’s Nobel Peace Prize laureate Desmond Tutu . 


“They have been fantastic and we’ll be doing our best not to disappoint them,” she said in a statement.
It added that Tutu arrived home in a dressing gown embroidered with the words “Feet Up Arch”, and that he was looking forward to spending some time with his wife and watching cricket on television.

The much-loved anti-apartheid icon was hospitalised in 2011 for minor elective surgery, and again in 2013, but tests at that time showed no new malignancy.
Under apartheid, Tutu campaigned against white minority rule during the years that Nelson Mandela was imprisoned.

He was awarded the 1984 Nobel Peace Prize for his work.
Officially retired, he is still outspoken on the world’s injustices, and is widely viewed as South Africa’s leading moral voice

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