CAMBODIA has wrapped up a week-long
funeral for its revered former King Norodom Sihanouk with a procession
to return the cremated remains of the colourful ex-monarch to the royal
palace.
After chanting by 90 Buddhist monks, two diamond-studded gold urns
and one marble urn containing the remains were transported atop a golden
float shaped like a mythological bird from the crematorium to the
palace.
"This is to honour his majesty who is the greatest hero of
Cambodia," Sihanouk's long-time personal assistant Prince Sisowath
Thomico said.
The rest of the remains had been lowered into the
confluence of the Mekong, Tonle Sap and Tonle Bassac rivers in Phnom
Penh on Tuesday.
Sihanouk's widow Monique and his son King Norodom
Sihamoni travelled on the float with the urns during a televised
procession attended by senior government officials, including Prime
Minister Hun Sen.
The urns will be kept in a stupa inside the palace, where before his
death Sihanouk had asked to be placed with his favourite daughter,
Kantha Bopha, who died aged three.
Sihanouk died of a heart attack in Beijing in October, aged 89.
After
lying in state for three months, his embalmed body was cremated on
Monday after several days of lavish ceremonies including an elaborate
procession through the streets of Phnom Penh that drew crowds of
mourners.
A father of 14 children over six marriages, Sihanouk
abdicated in 2004 after steering Cambodia through six decades marked by
independence from France, civil war, the murderous Khmer Rouge regime,
his own exile and finally peace.
Many elderly Cambodians credit
him with overseeing a rare period of political stability in the 1950s
and 1960s, following independence, until the Khmer Rouge emerged in the
1970s.
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