More than 100,000 people lined Singapore's streets to bid farewell to its founding father Lee Kuan Yew on Sunday, officials said as a week of mourning ended in the city-state he led to prosperity.
Torrential rain soaked the crowds as howitzers fired a 21-gun salute to the country's first prime minister and jet fighters screamed across the sky in a grand farewell normally reserved for a head of state."The light that has guided us all these years has been extinguished," his son, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong, told a state funeral attended by 2,200 people including Asia-Pacific leaders at the National University of Singapore.
Lee's coffin, draped in the red-and-white national flag and protected by a glass case atop a two-wheeled gun carriage, was taken in a procession from parliament to the university with close to 2,000 police officers ensuring security.
The body of Singapore's former prime minister Lee Kuan Yew arrives at the University of Cultural Center where the funeral service will take place in Singapore on March 29, 2015. Singapore's founding leader Lee Kuan Yew will be given an elaborate state funeral, ending a week of mourning for the man who led the city-state to independence 50 years ago. AFP PHOTO / ADEK BERRY
Officials said 454,687 people — in a nation with just 3.34 million citizens — had paid their last respects to Lee, 91, before his wake ended in parliament on Saturday.
People chanting Lee's name wept openly, waved miniature flags and threw flowers on the street as the motorcade drove through districts associated with his 60-year political career.
Four air force F-16 jets staged a fly-past as the cortege made its way through a square where Lee was first sworn in as prime minister in 1959.
He kept the position for 31 years, ruling with an iron fist to transform Singapore from a sleepy British colonial outpost into a gleaming metropolis that now enjoys one of the world's highest standards of living.
Singapore became a republic in 1965 after a brief and stormy union with Malaysia.
Lee died less than five months before the island celebrates its 50th anniversary as a nation on August 9.
Civil defence sirens sounded across the island at the start of one minute of silence during the state funeral.
It ended with the singing of the Malay-language national anthem "Majulah Singapura" (Onwards Singapore), after which Lee's remains were driven to a suburban crematorium with mourners still lining the roads.
Lee said in a note to his children in 2011, one year after the death of his wife of 63 years Kwa Geok Choo, that "for reasons of sentiment, I would like part of my ashes to be mixed up with Mama’s, and both her ashes and mine put side by side in the columbarium".
One of the mourners on the streets on Sunday was Tan Yen Lee, 26, a nurse at the Singapore General Hospital where Lee died on Monday after a seven-week confinement for severe pneumonia.
"We have seen over the last week amazing scenes, a massive outpouring of emotion for our national hero, and it culminates today," she told AFP.
The ceremonial gun carriage bearing Singapore's late former prime minister passes by during his funeral procession in Singapore on March 29, 2015. AFP PHOTO / Amir Yusof
Strangers huddled together under umbrellas and families came early to grab choice spots along the 15-kilometre (10-mile) route of the funeral procession.
"As Singaporeans we may have our differences, but when it comes to a crunch we stand together. That is what Singapore is about and that is Mr Lee's legacy," said teacher Joel Lim, 35.
Lee stepped down in 1990 in favour of his deputy Goh Chok Tong, who was succeeded by Lee's son.
Former US president Bill Clinton and Lee's close friend former US secretary of state Henry Kissinger, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, South Korean President Park Geun-Hye, Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen and Indonesian President Joko Widodo were among the dignitaries in attendance.
William Hague, the former foreign secretary and current leader of the House of Commons, represented old colonial ruler Britain.
Lee, a British-educated lawyer, is revered for his economic and social legacy but criticised by rights groups for sidelining political opponents, muzzling the press and clamping down on civil liberties.
A number of his opponents went bankrupt due to costly libel damages or went into self-exile.
Phil Robertson, deputy Asia director for Human Rights Watch, called on Singapore to mark Lee's passing by reconciling with the dwindling number of political exiles still afraid to return home.
Singapore now has one of the world's highest gross domestic product per capita incomes at $56,284 in 2014, from $516 when it gained independence.
Ninety percent of Singaporeans own their homes thanks to a public housing scheme launched by Lee, the crime rate is low, and highly paid civil servants are consistently ranked among the world's most honest.
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