The coffin of former South African president Nelson Mandela is
transported to the Union Buildings on the last day of his lying in state
in Pretoria on December 13, 2013. PHOTO | STEPHANE DE SAKUTIN
AFP
PRETORIA
South
Africans queued Friday for a final chance to say a personal farewell to
Nelson Mandela, with some camping overnight for his last day of lying
in state.
Friday was the last of three public viewing
days, before Mandela's casket is removed and transported to his boyhood
home of Qunu in Eastern Cape province for burial on Sunday.
Tens
of thousands had lined up on Thursday, but many were turned away as the
system was unable to cope with the vast numbers of people wanting to
pay their final respects. (READ: With VIPs gone, South Africans get Madiba back)
'ONCE-IN-A-LIFETIME OPPORTUNITY'
Stanley
Luvhimbe, 40, who had driven 450 kilometres from Thohoyandou near the
Zimbabwe border on Wednesday, said he was determined to get in after two
days of frustration.
"It's a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. We will never see him again. He is my hero," Luvhimbe.
Mandela's casket is scheduled to be flown to Qunu early Saturday morning, a day before the actual burial on his family's estate.
Thousands
of high-profile mourners, including numerous political figures, are
expected to descend on the remote location which workers have been busy
preparing for a week.
According to government officials, the venue will accommodate some 5,000 people.
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