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Nelson Mandela's Former Bodyguard Makes Astonishing Claim About The 1995 Rugby World Cup

Nelson Mandela's Former Bodyguard Makes Astonishing Claim About The 1995 Rugby World Cup
Gavin Cooney
By Gavin Cooney
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Rory Steyn was formerly chief bodyguard to Nelson Mandela,and during the 1995 World Cup, he was involved in the New Zealand security detail. In an interview this week with the New Zealand Herald, Steyn claimed that the All Blacks were deliberately poisoned ahead of the World Cup final, believing betting syndicates were to blame.

Conspiracy theories surrounding the week have abounded for years, with All Blacks winger Eric Rush claimed that that, had the final been staged 24 hours earlier, New Zealand would have been unable to field a team.

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Steyn has this week added credence to those beliefs, and such was the paranoia among the All Blacks camp ahead of the final, they decided they would eat separately to the rest of the guests in the team hotel in Johannesburg. Steyn advised the squad against this:

I said that makes it easier to target them, I didn't think it was a good idea.

On the Thursday [June 22] before the final, which was on Saturday [June 24], they were poisoned. About two-thirds of the squad got very sick, properly sick.

I believe it was the water that was got at, because the food that was served at lunch time ... was chicken burgers and hamburgers.

He said some who ate chicken were sick and some who ate beef were sick.

I don't think it was the food, I think it was the coffee and the tea and possibly even the drinking water.

 

While New Zealand subsequently hired a private investigator, the investigation proved nothing, although Steyn has said that " I know what I saw ... A team of guys lying on the floor, very, very ill". Steyn also believes that nobody from within the South African rugby union was involved, saying that he believed that betting syndicates were responsible, as "the odds were on the All Blacks".

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[New Zealand Herald]

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