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Archbishop Desmond Tutu speaks during a memorial service for former South African President Nelson Mandela at Westminster Abbey in London March 3, 2014.John Stillwell

It's time for retired archbishop Desmond Tutu to begin saying no to public events and causes in order to conserve his health, his daughter said Thursday, as the Nobel laureate remained hospitalized for a persistent infection.

Tutu, 83, was admitted to a Cape Town hospital on Tuesday, where he is receiving an "intensive course" of antibiotics to fight a "stubborn infection," the Desmond and Leah Tutu Legacy Foundation said earlier in a statement.

"We are confident that he will recover well from the treatment," Tutu's daughter Mpho said in a televised press briefing.

Tutu's illness was not related to prostate cancer, for which he has been treated for years, Mpho Tutu said. It is uncertain how long he will remain in hospital, she said. She would not reveal the nature of his infection, but said the cancer remained dormant.

Mpho Tutu, an ordained reverend, believes it's time for her father to begin declining public events.

"I know that my dad has a deep and abiding passion for many causes and concerns that he has been willing, at the drop of an email, to sign his name on to be a voice for those who are facing injustice," she said. "But my father is not quite as young as he looks so we recognize that his energy is waning a little bit."

The foundation, named after the anti-apartheid activist and his wife, thanked the public for the support they have received since Tutu was admitted to hospital.

"The Tutu family has been overwhelmed by the deluge of love and prayers (and interview requests) that have poured in," the foundation said in a statement.

Tutu was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1984 for campaigning against apartheid.

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