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Ghanaians bid Kofi Annan farewell

A steady stream of mourners on Tuesday paid their respects to the former UN secretary general Kofi Annan, as his body lay in state in the capital of his native Ghana.

The diplomat’s body was flown back from his home in Switzerland on Monday ahead of a state funeral and private burial in Accra on Thursday.

Nobel peace laureate Annan, who was the world body’s first leader from sub-Saharan Africa, died aged 80 on August 18 after a short illness.

His coffin, draped in Ghana’s red, green and gold flag, was guarded by senior military officers in ceremonial uniform at the Accra International Conference Centre.

A choir sang hymns and traditional dances were performed as the public got their chance to say farewell to one of the country’s most famous sons.

Fritz Kitcher, who spent his career working for the United Nations in Geneva in human rights, said he saw Annan rise through the ranks.

Now retired and back living in Ghana, he said Annan taught him “the benefit of humility, the benefit of honesty, the benefit of decisiveness, and diplomacy from the grassroots”.

His role at the UN’s first black African leader was “an honour for Ghana”, he said.

“It was marvellous in our eyes, it was one of these things that we can only dream… he lifted Africa and showed that we are also able to do great things,” Kitcher told AFP.

Most of those who queued to pay their respects wore black and red mourning clothes and passed under large posters of Annan to the sound of pulsating drums.

Cleaner Akwo Kwame Johnson, from neighbouring Ivory Coast said he wanted to pay his last respects to “our great father”.

Whenever he saw Annan in the news, Johnson said he felt like he was watching a family member.

“He was a president to all the world,” he added

Pensioner Joyce Atiase said she was mourning the loss of a “great man”. “We all loved him. He played a major role for our country, he did his best,” she said.

Scores of world leaders past and present, as well as royalty, are expected in Accra for Annan’s funeral on Thursday.

A private burial service will then be held in the city’s military cemetery.

(AFP)

 

A CAPSULE BIOGRAPHY OF THE DEPARTED WORLD DIPLOMAT

 

Key dates in the life of former UN chief and Nobel peace laureate Kofi Annan, the first black man to head the world body.

April 8, 1938: Born in the Ghanaian city of Kumasi to an aristocratic family from the Fante tribe.

1962: After studying economics in Geneva he joined the World Health Organization and went to work in a number of other UN bodies including the UN refugee agency.

1972: Annan obtained a master’s degree at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT).

1993-96: He served deputy head of UN peacekeeping, during the Rwandan genocide and the war in Bosnia.

January 1, 1997: He became UN secretary general, the first from within the organisation and the first from sub-Saharan Africa. He was re-elected for a second five-year term in June 2001.

October 12, 2001: Annan and the United Nations were jointly awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.

2005: He became embroiled in a corruption scandal over the UN oil-for-food programme in Iraq. He was later cleared of any wrongdoing.

2007: He became a founding member of The Elders, a group of statesmen who speak out on global issues. He also set up the Kofi Annan Foundation which says it aims to promote better global governance and work for peace.

February 2012: Annan is chosen by the United Nations and the Arab League to mediate in the Syrian war, but he throws in the towel five moths later.

August 18, 2018: Annan dies in Switzerland after a short illness.

(AFP)

 

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