Nelson Mandela’s golden hand casts sell for $10m in bitcoin

Must Try

Trending

Gold castings of the hands of South Africa’s first black President Nelson Mandela have been sold for $10m (£7m) in bitcoin.

Four casts of Nelson Mandela’s hands were made by mining group Harmony Gold in 2002

Canadian crypto-currency exchange firm Arbitrade bought four casts from South African businessman Malcolm Duncan.

The firm said it planned to launch a global “Golden Hands of Nelson Mandela” tour to educate young people about the anti-apartheid icon’s life.

This is the first time artefacts of Mr Mandela have been sold in bitcoin.

Mr Mandela was jailed for 27 years for fighting white minority rule in South Africa.

He was released in 1990, and served as president from 1994 to 1999.

Mr Mandela died in 2013 at the age of 95. He had turned into a global brand, with businessmen and artists cashing in on his name.

Mr Duncan, who now lives in Canada, bought the casts from mining group Harmony Gold in 2002 for about $31,000.

Half of the money paid to Harmony Gold was meant to go to charity, but it remains unclear as to whether that happened, Bloomberg news agency reports.

Harmony said it had “supplied Mr Duncan with the necessary paperwork verifying the provenance as requested by his attorneys,” but declined to comment on what happened to the donation, Bloomberg reports.

The casts, which weigh around 20lb (9kg), include Mr Mandela’s hand, palm and fist. They are part of a collection meant to mark the years the former president spent in prison on Robben Island.

The artefacts are believed to be the only ones left in the world.

The other sets of the collection were ordered to be destroyed by Mr Mandela, Mr Duncan told Bloomberg.

It was part of the former president’s attempt to control his copyright after a number of scandals, including forgery allegations, arose around the sale of art bearing his image and name.

Arbitrade has paid Mr Duncan a bitcoin deposit that has been converted to $50,000, and the rest is expected to be paid in quarterly instalments of at least $2m, Bloomberg reports.

“They take possession when I have the dollar amount in the bank, At two-and-a-quarter million at a time, they take one hand at a time,” Mr Duncan was quoted as saying.

Arbitrade is due to launch an initial coin offering and plans to mine its own crypto-currencies and trade others, Bloomberg reports.

The company’s chairman, Len Schutzman, told the news agency that it will back all its virtual currency with a percentage of physical metal, such as gold.  BBC

Related Articles

Mpumelelo Ndlovu is a Data Management Professional and Cloud Engineer. You can follow him on Twitter (X) : @hlosukwakha and LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mpums

Mandela Debate: Slaying the wrong dragon: Why we must stop fighting our parents’ wars

0
The tragedy of our time is that we often confuse the dragons. We blame yesterday’s fighters for not slaying today’s monsters. We keep shouting at the past while the present quietly tightens its grip.
File picture of an illustration of South Africa's then president Nelson Mandela with the country's flag in the background (Picture by Frizio via DepositPhotos.com)

The Dangers of Comfortable Lies: Why Mbofana misreads Mandela and misrepresents Mugabe

3
Tendai Ruben Mbofana’s defence of Nelson Mandela on Nehanda Radio reads like an attempt to enshroud the past in bubble wrap.
Then Zimbabwe president Robert Mugabe and Nelson Mandela of South Africa (Pictures by IC Photo via DepositPhotos.com and © John Mathew Smith 2001 - www.celebrity-photos.com via cc-by-sa-2.0.)

If Mandela was a sell-out, then what do we call Mugabe? – A response...

0
Can it get any weirder? I honestly did not know whether to laugh or cry when I read today’s Nehanda Radio op-ed accusing Nelson Mandela of “selling out” South Africa’s black majority.
South Africa's first President Nelson Mandela during his first trip to the United States seen here at Longworth Building in Washington, October 4, 1994. (Picture via © John Mathew Smith 2001 - www.celebrity-photos.com via cc-by-sa-2.0. and NEW YORK - JUNE 21, 2014: Nelson Mandela mural in Williamsburg section in Brooklyn. — Photo by Zhukovsky via DepositPhotos.com)

Mandela’s treacherous legacy: How the saint sold out South Africa’s black masses

0
Nelson Mandela, the saccharine saint of global liberalism, is worshipped as the architect of South Africa's so-called rainbow miracle. His 1990 prison release and 1994 presidency are peddled as epic victories of saintly grace over barbaric tyranny.
A woman and four men were arrested in Houghton for allegedly hijacking a white Toyota Corolla in Louis Botha Avenue in Oaklands. Image: Supplied/JMPD

Nelson Mandela’s grandson arrested for carjacking along with four other suspects

0
Mbuso Mandela, the grandson of the late South African struggle icon and President, Nelson Mandela, has been arrested after he and four other people believed to be his friends reportedly hijacked a car at gunpoint in Johannesburg.
0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Donate to Nehanda Radio

Latest Recipes

Latest

More Recipes Like This