Sunday 15 December 2013

Adieu Madiba!


Respect: Candles are lit under a portrait of Nelson Mandela before his funeral. One for every year of his life Nelson Mandela was today buried in the remote village where the anti-apartheid icon grew up after his four-hour state funeral this morning. South Africa's first black President died in his Johannesburg home on December 5, at the age of 95 after a long battle with illness and he was laid to rest in his grave in Qunu in Eastern Cape province. Military lined the route up to the hillside as Mandela's flag-draped coffin was carried on a gun carriage to the private burial on his family's estate. As his body was placed on the grave the South African flag on the coffin was removed and handed to Mandela's widow Graca Machel, who was comforted by his ex-wife Winnie Mandela. A fly-past then followed accompanied by a 21-gun salute and a solitary trumpeter played the Last Post as his body was lowered into the ground. Earlier his funeral was held where around 5,000 guests including the Prince of Wales, Oprah Winfrey, Richard Branson and the American civil rights activist Jesse Jackson paid their respects. But the ceremony overran by nearly two hours as political figures including Jacob Zuma gave a series of extended eulogies, meaning that Mandela's tribe's tradition that burials should be at noon 'when the sun is at its highest and the shadow at its shortest' had to change.

Mr Mandela is survived by his wife Graça, three daughters, 18 grandchildren and 12 great-grandchildren.

 Sombre: South Africa's current president Jacob Zuma sitting between Winnie Mandela and Graca MachelWinnie Mandela (left), ex-wife of former South African President, and Graca Macel, widow of Mandela, wipe away tears as his flag-draped coffin arrives at the Mthata airport Stage: The speakers delivered their addresses in front of 95 candles, representing every year of Mandela's lifeMourners: US talk show host Oprah Winfrey, centre, her husband Stedman Graham, left, and English businessman Richard Branson, right, watching the funeral service Rerpesenting Britain: The Queen sent the Prince of Wales, pictured here speaking to Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma, a politician and former wife of Jacob ZumaEmbrace: Archbishop Desmond Tutu, who initially claimed he had not been invited to the funeral, hugs former president Thabo MbekiGathered to remember Madiba: South Africa's president Jacob Zuma (2nd left), Mandela's ex-wife Winnie Mandela (left), and the widow of Mandela, Graca Machel (3rd left), sit by his coffinArm in arm: Mandela's second wife Winnie Madikizela Mandela (far right) and the statesman's widow Graca Machel (centre) walk together as he is about to be buriedA nation in mourning: Three helicopters carrying South African flags fly over the burial site today as a much smaller crowd of mourners watched the great statesman laid to rest after ten days of official mourningAir force tribute: A squadron of South African jets flew across the skies above the Eastern Cape hills where Mandela spent his formative yearsHonor: A gun salute is fired as the funeral procession nears the Mandela family compoundParade: Members of the South Africa navy look on at the dome which was set up to host the funeralPrayer: A traditional Shembe priest offers prayers as he looks towards the dome where Mandela's funeral was heldA South African mourner embraces a poster of Mandela, while waiting with other mourners for the motorcade transporting the body of former President Nelson Mandela to pass by in the town of MthathaPaying respects: Thousands of mourners line the streets of Umthatha as the enormous convoy of police, military and other vehicles sweeps through their townSpectator: A man watches the funeral on a big screen erected near the site of the ceremonyNelson Mandela, two days after his liberation, welcomed by 100,000 people in the football stadium in Soweto

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