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The State funeral of the late
President John Evans Atta Mills, which has generated mass publicity
locally and globally and an unprecedented outpour of the publics’
sympathy, would culminate in a burial ceremony steeped in distinctive
military traditions on Friday, August 10.
After the religious
ceremonies that would be tinged with poignant evocation of hymns and the
performance of the final funeral rites by the family of the late leader
at the Independence Square, the Military would take over the casket,
escorting the body of the one-time Commander-in-Chief of the Ghana Armed
Forces (GAF) to his final resting place at the Geese Park on the Castle
Drive.
Before the body of the late President Mills is interred,
the casket containing his remains would be placed on a gun-carriage by
eight pall-bearers of Brigadier General rank and taken on a State drive
on a selected route lined with personnel of other security services.
The cortege would be escorted by a Ghana Airforce helicopter.
When the cortege finally gets back to the Independence Square after the
State drive, military personnel in full ceremonial garb, will line both
sides of the Castle Drive, with reversed arms to give the departed
leader his last honours.
At the Geese Park, the pall-bearers
will lower the casket from the gun-carriage and place it on the grave,
where military buglers will sound the “last post” amidst the booms of a
21 gun salute by a detachment of personnel of the 66 Artillery Regiment
of the GAF.
Simultaneously, there would be a fly-past by three
Ghana Air Force jets ejecting long lines of smoke in the national
colours, with Ghana Navy ships also performing ceremonial maneuvers on
the shoreline behind the Independence Square.
After final
prayers, the body of the late President Mills would be lowered into the
grave to start his journey into the world beyond. |
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