Audio By Carbonatix
Thousands turned out on Sunday for a concert in Johannesburg to honour the life of Nelson Mandela, with Beyonce leading an all-star line-up.
The event, held to mark 100 years since the birth of South Africa's first black president, was organized by advocacy group Global Citizen. It also aimed to highlight the fight against poverty, gender inequality and hunger, causes that Mandela championed.
World Bank President Jim Kim was among a number of political and business leaders attending the event and he announced a $1 billion investment in health and education across Africa in 2019.
"Be-yo-nce! Be-yo-nce!," chanted a group of ladies as they waited in a long queue to enter Johannesburg's FNB stadium, where Jay-Z, Usher and Ed Sheeran were also set to perform.
Thousands of fans, some wearing Global Citizen T-shirts and temporary tattoos on their shoulders, cheered, danced and cried at the sight of their favorite artists.
Many fans had been given free tickets in exchange for signing petitions and sending tweets to world leaders, urging them to take action to improve education, water supplies, sanitation, health and other issues.
Kenya's President Uhuru Kenyatta appeared via video link and pledged to increase his country's education budget to 30 percent of the total budget.
Richard Branson, also via a recorded video link, announced a $105 million commitment from donors including UK Aid, Virgin Unite and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation towards ending trachoma, a disease that causes blindness.
"I'm from a neighbourhood where small kids falling into pit latrines at school or home is a common occurrence," Lucia Cele, an IT specialist told Reuters. "So to hear such commitments towards issues like sanitation is very encouraging for our society.
"Let their commitments not end here, tonight at this stadium.”
Vodacom's Chief Executive Shameel Joosub pledged 500 million rands ($36 million) during the event to fight gender-based violence and enhance sanitation in schools and digital literacy.
Mandela was imprisoned for nearly three decades for his fight against the apartheid regime. He was released in 1990 and led South Africa to its first free elections in 1994. He died on December 5, 2013.
Latest Stories
-
‘Ministerial signature is not ceremonial ink’ – CDM questions Education Minister’s role in curriculum saga
2 minutes -
Multimedia Kumasi staff gathers to celebrate 31 years of broadcasting and community service
6 minutes -
Bryan Acheampong is our ‘Kivo gari’, a ready leader for NPP – Pious Hadzie insists
7 minutes -
I dismissed the former ‘Ayalolo’ boss for failing to expand fleet – Local Gov’t Minister
8 minutes -
“Our PC candidates beat our presidential candidate” – Bryan Acheampong calls for unifying candidate to lead NPP
11 minutes -
Gov’t seeks €1m spanish grant to expand ‘Ayalolo’ bus fleet – Local Gov’t Minister
11 minutes -
Little Angels Trust donates to children admitted at Cape Coast Metropolitan Hospital
15 minutes -
Victor Smith refutes claims Sedina Tamakloe is not in Nevada Detention Centre in US
27 minutes -
“Let our boast be in Him ”alone”—Multimedia CEO to staff at thanksgiving service
33 minutes -
US tightens border security as immigrant visa freeze hits 75 nations, including African allies
39 minutes -
The invisible wall between Ghana’s economic gains, household reality
50 minutes -
Hannah Affum: Breaking Barriers with Radiotracers and Resilience
50 minutes -
CDM calls out institutional failures over controversial SHS curriculum
53 minutes -
Ghana to host ACI World Congress 2026
1 hour -
The future can be bright in the fight against TB
1 hour
