Ethiopians mourn for Meles Zenawi

Source:AFP Published: 2012-9-2 23:55:05

Tens of thousands of Ethiopians mourned Sunday the late strongman Meles Zenawi, in the first state funeral staged for a leader of the Horn of Africa nation in more than 80 years.

Followed by giant crowds, Meles' flag-draped coffin slowly processed through the capital from the National Palace to the vast Meskel Square, his family dressed in black following behind, many in tears.

The coffin arrived on top of a horse-drawn carriage adorned with white flowers and pictures of Meles, who died last month aged 57, as a boy and young man, before the casket was placed on a stage above the giant crowd.

Religious leaders from Ethiopia's Christian Orthodox Church, dressed in flowing embroidered robes and carrying red and gold velvet umbrellas, held prayers for the sea of mourners.

Ethiopia's deputy prime minister, Hailemariam Desalegn, who will lead the government until national elections in 2015, sat right behind the coffin, and welcomed many African leaders and foreign dignitaries.

"The late prime minister was working not only for the renaissance of Ethiopia, but also for the renaissance for all of Africa," Hailemariam said in a speech after prayers. "All his initiatives will keep going forward, all the transformation plans will progress," he promised.

Presidents of all Ethiopia's neighbors, with the exception of arch-foe Eritrea, attended, including Djibouti's Ismail Omar Guelleh, Kenya's Mwai Kibaki, South Sudan's Salva Kiir, Sudan's Omar al-Bashir, and Somalia's Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed.

South African President Jacob Zuma said Africa had "lost one of the greatest sons of the continent" while Paul Kagame of Rwanda said Meles had "led a humble and simple life, but very meaningful one."

Benin's President and current Africa Union Chairman Thomas Boni Yayi hailed Meles' "driving force" in efforts to end conflict, while US ambassador to the United Nations Susan Rice praised Meles "a key Western ally in a volatile region with Al Qaeda linked groups" for his "selfless" efforts.

"Even as we argued whether about economics, democracy, human rights, regional security or our respective foreign policies, I was always struck by two things, Meles was consistently reasoned in his judgments and thoughtful in his decisions," Rice said.

Senior officials from China and the European Union were also attending.

Thousands of soldiers stood guard as the ceremony progressed, some of them crying.

The funeral ceremony was to move later to the capital's Holy Trinity Cathedral, where Meles will be buried.

Meles died in a Brussels hospital on August 20 after a protracted illness. He had not been seen in public for two months, spurring rumors about his health.

His successor Hailemariam will be sworn in after Meles is buried, although no date has been fixed. He is a relatively unknown politician who hails from the south, unlike many of the country's political elite who are from the north.

AFP



Posted in: Africa

blog comments powered by Disqus