Activist Eldridge Cleaver dies (62)

Eldridge Cleaver, the 1960s Black Panther leader whose book, Soul on Ice, became a manual for the Black Power movement in the…

Eldridge Cleaver, the 1960s Black Panther leader whose book, Soul on Ice, became a manual for the Black Power movement in the United States, died yesterday at age 62 in a hospital in the Los Angeles suburb of Pomona.

A spokeswoman for the Pomona Valley Medical Centre said Cleaver died early yesterday, but declined to give any details on the cause of death, citing a family request for privacy.

Cleaver went through many transformations, from convict to revolutionary to conservative. He ran for president of the United States as a revolutionary and once tried to win the Republican nomination for the US Senate, running as a conservative.

Soul on Ice, an autobiographical indictment of white society, was central to the Black Power movement of the 1960s.

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Cleaver sprang to national prominence as minister of information, or spokesman, for the Black Panthers, a black nationalist group famous for its armed confrontations with police.

He joined the group a few months after it was founded by Huey Newton and Bobby Seale in Oakland, California, in 1966. Cleaver fled the US for seven years after a shootout with police in Oakland in 1968, living in Cuba, Algeria and France, before returning.

He ran unsuccessfully for President in 1968. Later he was ousted from the Panthers over a bitter and public dispute with Newton. Cleaver became a born-again Christian and a Republican.

In a 1986 interview, Cleaver attempted to explain his many transformations. "Everybody changes, not just me," he said.

"I was pulled over in my car with my secretary for a traffic thing and one of the officers walked up to the car, and saw me sitting inside. He took off his hat and said, `Hey, Eldridge, remember me?'

"He used to be a Panther," Cleaver said. "It was hard to believe."