/ 13 October 2006

Former president PW Botha admitted to hospital

Former president PW Botha was admitted to the George Medi-Clinic on Friday, hospital manager George Schutte has confirmed.

He is to be discharged from the George Medi-Clinic on Saturday morning after undergoing what the hospital says are routine checks.

”Mr Botha will be kept overnight for routine tests to be run and will be discharged tomorrow morning,” a statement said.

Botha, who was head of government, first as prime minister then as state president, from 1978 to 1989, turned 90 in January this year.

Though he walks with a stick, he has retained much of the forceful personality that earned him the nickname ”the big crocodile” in his political heyday.

He lives at his Wilderness lagoon-side home Die Anker with his second wife Barbara.

Botha was elected MP for George in the landslide 1948 election that brought the National Party to power, and was head of government through the most turbulent years of the anti-apartheid struggle.

Minister of defence before he took over the leadership of government, he coined the phrase ”total onslaught” to justify the ever-greater use of force to suppress growing black resistance to whites-only rule.

He was seen out of the presidency in 1989 by FW de Klerk after suffering a light stroke earlier that year.

The George Medi-Clinic describes itself as a 160-bed multidisciplinary private hospital. — Sapa