- South Africans from all walks of life queued patiently from early hours of the morning to file past his open coffin
- Pictures show lines of mourners snaking for hundreds of yards as they waited for buses to government building
- Many had queued for hours yesterday, but were turned away by evening because of the sheer number of people
- Attention has been focused on world leaders and celebrities, but today's viewing was reserved for general public
- Mourner: 'My heart is so broken. He united us here in South Africa - white people, black people, Indian people'
By
Simon Tomlinson
His head just visible as he lies in an
open coffin, this is the final glimpse of Nelson Mandela that thousands
of South Africans queued for hours to see.
The
former president and anti-apartheid hero was today given back to the
people who queued from the early hours to file past his open casket on a
day of viewing reserved for the public.
Aerial
images showed lines of mourners snaking for around two miles as they
queued patiently for buses to the building where his body is lying in
state and then again as they waited to go inside.
Final glimpse: The head of former South African
leader Nelson Mandela is just visible as his body lies in state on a day
when thousands of ordinary South Africans queued up to pay their
respects
Waiting to see their hero: This image shows
thousands of South Africans queuing for around two miles to get on buses
to take them to view Nelson Mandela's body
Determined: Mourners then faced huge queues at the Union Buildings where Mr Mandela's body is lying in state
Time to grief: Nelson Mandela was today given
back to ordinary South Africans on a day of viewing reserved for the
solely for the general public
Anti-apartheid icon: Nelson Mandela's body is
transported from the mortuary to the government buildings on each of the
three morning his coffin lies in state
One mourner, Anita Bodiba, 35, said: 'I can't
even sleep, I'm thinking of Madiba. He is the one who united us here in
South Africa - white people, black people, Indian people'
Overwhelming popularity: Hundreds of mourners
queue for buses before heading to the Union Buildings in Pretoria, where
Nelson Mandela's body is lying in state
A day for the people: Until now the cameras of
the world have often been trained on leaders, VIPs and celebrities
paying tribute to a man known for his common touch
Until now the cameras of the world have
often been trained on leaders, VIPs and celebrities paying tribute to a
man known for his common touch - a man who related to princes and
paupers with equal ease.
Ordinary
mourners from all walks of life had also queued for hours on end
yesterday to view the body, but many were turned away by evening without
having made it to the front of the long, winding line of people united
in grief and gratitude for the father of their democratic nation.
Many returned today for another chance, with the entire day given over to general public access.
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'My heart is so broken,' said
Anita Bodiba, 35, who arrived at the seat of government, the Union
Buildings, hours before dawn to join the long queue that had already
formed.
'I can't even sleep,
I'm thinking of Madiba. He is the one who united us here in South
Africa - white people, black people, Indian people,' she said - using
the clan name by which the democracy icon is fondly known.
Patient: People standing in line as they queue to view the coffin during the lying in state at the Union Buildings in Pretoria
Day trip: People with umbrellas queue along a
road on the second of three days of public viewing set aside to see Mr
Mandela's body
Lying in state: Many returned to the Union
Buildings for another chance to see the late leader's body, with the
entire day given over to general public access
On Wednesday, Mandela's
distraught widow Graca Machel and other family members were followed by
presidents, royalty and other international figures in paying their last
respects in the amphitheatre of the Union Buildings where the Nobel
laureate is laying in state.
It was here that he was inaugurated as South Africa's first black president in 1994, after emerging from 27 years' imprisonment.
A
third day of lying in state will be held Friday, after which Mandela's
body will be transported to his boyhood home of Qunu, ahead of its
eventual burial on Sunday.
Thursday's
programme began, as the day before, with Mandela's casket brought in a
solemn cortege from the 1 Military Hospital to the Union Buildings.
Hoping to get their chance: Visitors arrive by
bus to line up to pay their respects to former South African President
Nelson Mandela
Visitors leave after viewing the body of Nelson Mandela who died at his home last Thursday at the age of 95
Thousands lined the route as a
black hearse, flanked by motorcycle outriders, carried the flag-draped
coffin on its journey through the streets of Pretoria.
In
the Union Buildings amphitheatre, soon to be renamed after him,
Mandela's body lies underneath a perspex screen, dressed in the type of
printed shirt that became his trademark.
Two
navy officers stood by the coffin, their eyes downcast, and Mandela's
grandson Mandla sat in a chair on the platform supporting the coffin.
All walks of life: A police officer helps an
elderly lady line up to view the body of former South African president
Nelson Mandela
Reflecting: A visitor pauses after viewing the
body of Nelson Mandela which was brought to the Union buildings in a
cortege from the 1 Military Hospital
Respect: Nelson Mandela's body will lie in state
for three days as part of ten days of events commemorating the life of
Mr Mandela
Celebrating his life: A street vendor wears a
button with an image of former South African president Nelson Mandela
outside the Union Buildings
Some visitors collapsed as they passed
the coffin, felled by the weight of their grief, and were helped away
by medical personnel and fellow mourners.
'It was so sad,' Alinah Lekalakala, 52, said after seeing the body of her icon.
'I needed to pay my last respects because I am so grateful for what he has done. This will help me to accept that he is gone.'
Emotional: A mourner walks away after viewing
Nelson Mandela's body on Wednesday when many people were turned away
before getting a chance to see him
Overcome: A mourner weeps into her scarf while holding a South African flag after paying her respects to Mr Mandela
For Tryphina Kau, 78, the event was a joyful one.
'I
am very, very happy because his spirit is still with us, only the body
is going,' she said, recounting the day that Mandela shook her hand
while she queued to vote in South Africa's first democratic elections in
1994.
'I saw him at the beginning, and I came to see him at the end.'
Mixed emotions: Children at a Christmas Party
celebrating the life of former South African president Nelson Mandela at
the museum in Qunu
Lighting up people's lives: A flame burns in honour of former South African president Nelson Mandela at the museum in Qunu
Worldwide appeal: A woman writes her condolences
in a book for Nelson Mandela during a memorial service at the
Sint-Gudule Cathedral in Brussels
Lebogang Phillips, a 36-year-old
police officer who had served on Mandela's security detail when he was
president, remembered the man as 'the friendliest person I have ever
met'.
'When meeting people, he would always try to speak their language, whatever it was.'
The
line of people queueing to catch a glimpse of their hero was already
several city blocks shortly after dawn, and continued snaking around
streets surrounding the Union Buildings by lunchtime.
Preparations: Police stop cars from using a main
road running past Nelson Mandela's home as the construction of a dome
is completed that will be used at his funeral
Some mourners were dressed in
the vibrant yellow, green and black of the ruling African National
Congress that Mandela once led, and many wore black armbands.
People
carried posters bearing Mandela's likeness and many clutched miniature
South African flags, dancing and singing revolutionary songs from the
liberation struggle era as helicopters hovered overhead.
White
South African siblings Sean and Louise Bos, 21 and 19 respectively,
flew from Cape Town on Wednesday morning to be part of the historic
occasion.
They queued until
closing time without making it to the front, then returned at 5.30am
today, queueing about five hours to see him.
'We never met him so we thought we'd come to say goodbye,' said Sean, as the pair rushed to catch a plane home afterwards.
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