Former
UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan on Thursday laid to rest in a state funeral
attended by African leaders and international statesmen who hailed his record
as an advocate for humanity and world peace.
Annan,
a Ghanaian national and Noble laureate, died in a Swiss hospital last month at
the age of 80.
His
body was flown to Accra on Monday for burial in his homeland, where he is seen
as a national hero.
Thousands
of mourners all over the world filled the auditorium for Thursday’s official
Current
UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres was among the dignitaries in attendance,
alongside former Ghanaian presidents, the leaders of Ivory Coast, Liberia,
Namibia and Niger, and the Crown Prince of Norway.
In an
address, Guterres hailed Annan, who served as the seventh UN Secretary-General
between 1997 and 2006, as an exceptional global leader with a deep faith in the
role of the UN as a force for good.
“As
we face the headwinds of our troubled and turbulent times, let us always be
inspired by the legacy of Kofi Annan,” Guterres said.
“Our
world needs it now more than ever,” he said.
The
ceremony was projected onto big screens outside the auditorium for the crowds
of mourners that could not fit inside the venue.
Many
commuters in the capital wore black as a sign of respect.
On
Wednesday, Annan’s family and Ghanaian dignitaries were among hundreds to file
past his casket amid traditional rites by local chiefs and clan leaders.
Annan,
a Ghanaian of Ashanti lineage, was granted a royal title by the Ashanti king in
2002.
The
elders said the rites, including presenting him with clothing and water, were
necessary to clear the path for a peaceful “travel” for their royal.
Some
mourners, like New York-based community mayor Delois Blakely, had flown long
distances to pay their respects.
Blakely,
who served as an ambassador of goodwill to Africa at the UN, told Reuters: “I
had known and worked with Kofi for close to 10 years.
He
spent his life trying hard to fix our broken society.”
As UN
boss he was linked to peace efforts to reunite the divided island of Cyprus,
submitting a reunification blueprint which was rejected in a referendum by
Greek Cypriots in 2004.
He staunchly opposed the
U.S.-led invasion of Iraq in 2003 and later served as the first UN envoy at the
start of Syria’s war, but quit after world powers failed to fulfill their
commitments, saying: “I lost my troops on the way to Damascus”.
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