Nelson Mandela’s flag-draped coffin is being carried to his final
resting place in the remote village where the anti-apartheid icon grew
up after his four-hour state funeral took place 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 will
now be laid in his grave in Qunu in Eastern Cape province.
The military lined the route up to the hillside as Mandela took his
final journey with his body driven on a gun carriage to the private
burial.
Earlier Mandela’s widow Graca Machel arrived at the state ceremony ahead
of her husband to honour the tradition of being home to receive his
body in a room where his portrait stood above a bank of 95 candles
representing each year of his remarkable life.
Around 5,000 guests, including his ex-wife Winnie, the Prince of Wales,
Oprah Winfrey, Richard Branson and the American civil rights activist
Jesse Jackson, were also at the service.
But the ceremony overran by nearly two hours as political figures gave a
series of extended eulogies, meaning that his 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.