Remembering the legacy of Nelson Mandela
The concert is the climax of a year of events celebrating the centennial of Mandela's birth in 1918, and is part of a campaign to tackle poverty, child malnutrition and boost gender equality. This year's Global Citizen Festival will be held at Johannesburg's 94,736-capacity FNB stadium.
Thousands of music fans, many of whom had been given free tickets in return for activism and campaigning work, began to flock to the stadium hours before the gig was due to kick off.
"I'm quite excited to have Beyonce and a bunch of these top-flight artists coming to South Africa to perform. It's nice to get this obvious reminder of Mandela's values," said a concert-goer Ano Shonhiwa, 23, as he made his way into the venue.
Ahead of the concert, Oprah Winfrey who will co-host the event, hailed Mandela's "goodness and integrity", describing him as her "favourite mentor".
Mandela was jailed under South Africa's apartheid regime. After being released in 1990, he led the country's transformation into a multi-racial democracy. He died on December 5, 2013, aged 95.
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Event organisers paid tribute to a rigger who died following a fall while helping to prepare the stage on Saturday. "The circumstances surrounding the incident are being investigated," Global Citizen said in a statement.
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