RW ("Bill") Johnson, 65, the Sunday Times correspondent in South Africa, author and frequent reviewer of books in the London Review of Books, is in hospital in Durban after becoming infected with a life-threatening bacterium, which required the emergency amputation of his left leg at the knee and partial amputation of fingers. He was infected with 14 strains of narcotising fasciitis when he cut his foot on a rock while swimming in a lagoon in a region of the South Coast of KwaZulu-Natal, described by his wife, the Russian-born historian, Professor Irina Filatova, as "paradise".
With grim irony, Johnson was struck down on the eve of publication of his new book, South Africa's Brave New World: The Beloved Country since the End of Apartheid (Penguin), an unsparing look at the decline of South Africa from the hubris of the Mandela years.
The source of contamination in the water is reliably believed to be untreated sewage which seeped into the river feeding into the lagoon at Trafalgar, close to Johnson's and Filatova's holiday home, from an impoverished squatter camp upstream. The lagoon, in which he had swum very frequently in the past, forms part of the Mpenjati Nature Reserve. Swimming in the lagoon has since been banned.
Emergency email consultation with Professor Gus McGrouther, professor of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery at the University of Manchester, enabled amputation of an infected hand to be avoided.
While Johnson lay between life and death in hospital in Margate, prior to being transferred to Durban, the Johannesburg Sunday Times, carried a review of Sampson's posthumously published autobiography, The Anatomist, which reported a cable from Mandela to Sampson - "What can you do about RW Johnson?" - in the early 1990s.
The reviewer, Chris Barron, noted that Mandela "clearly regarded Sampson as a useful member of the ANC's public relations team" (see here).