African leaders, both past and present, gathered in Namibia over the weekend to bury the country’s “founding father,” Sam Nujoma.
During his lifetime, Nujoma challenged colonialism and a military occupation by South Africa’s racist white minority government.
Dignitaries, including South African President Cyril Ramaphosa, former President Thabo Mbeki and ex-Tanzanian President Jakaya Kikwete, attended the funeral of Nujoma, who rose from herding cattle as a boy to lead the sparsely-populated, mostly desert southern African country on March 21, 1990.
“We fought under your command, … won the liberation struggle, and forever removed apartheid colonialism from the face of Namibia,” President Nangolo Mbumba said in a speech.
His coffin draped in the red, green and blue national flag, Nujoma was laid to rest – two weeks after his death at the age of 95 – at a North Korean-built war memorial spire called Heroes’ Acre.
The monument honours those who fought for independence from genocidal German colonialism and later – after Germany lost the territory in World War I – South African occupation.
Nujoma served from 1990 to 2005 and sought to project himself as a unifying leader bridging political divides.
However, he faced criticism over his intolerance of critical media coverage, diatribes against homosexuality and the 1998 constitutional amendment allowing him to run for a third term.