Audio By Carbonatix
The former leader of Angola's Unita rebel group, Jonas Savimbi, is being reburied 17 years after his death.
Thousands of former Unita fighters wearing white T-shirts emblazoned with images of Mr Savimbi attended the ceremony in his home village of Lopitanga.
His 2002 death brought an end to one of Africa's longest civil wars.
His remains were finally handed over to his family on Friday following confusion earlier in the week.

Unita says the funeral ceremony will be an important step towards national reconciliation in the oil-rich nation.
However, no government representatives were present at the ceremony, reports the AFP news agency.
His coffin was draped in Unita's green and red flag.
Angola was a Cold War battleground, with the US and apartheid South Africa backing Unita, while the governing MPLA received support from the former Soviet Union and Cuba.
At least 500,000 people died in the 27-year conflict.
Who was Jonas Savimbi?
Savimbi, known as the "black rooster", was an extremely divisive figure.

AFP
He was accused of widespread atrocities but was also a charismatic leader revered by thousands.
He was killed by government soldiers in 2002 and was hurriedly buried in a cemetery in the central town of Luena. His grave was marked by a cross of iron on a mound of red soil, AFP reports.
He will be buried near his father.
His family and Unita officials had demanded his reburial for many years to no avail.
The impasse was broken after his long-time foe, Jose Eduardo dos Santos, stepped down as president in 2017.
His successor, Joao Lourenco, agreed to their demands and his body was exhumed earlier this year, with DNA tests confirming his identity.
Durão Sakaíta, one of Savimbi's eldest sons, told the Lusa news agency that the family would "finally be at peace" after he was reburied.
Savimbi timeline:
- Founded Unita movement in 1966 in eastern Angola
- Abandoned his medical studies in Portugal to join anti-colonial struggle
- Despite Angola's independence in 1975, Unita continues to fight the government
- Savimbi considered himself leader of Angola's struggle against communism
- He received strong support from the US and met President Reagan at the White House in 1986
- His death in 2002 was celebrated in the capital, Luanda
Obituary: Jonas Savimbi, Unita's local boy
Latest Stories
-
Bawumia is a nice person but can’t lead Nkrumah’s Ghana – Frimpong-Boateng
7 minutes -
Amin Adam took over a rotten economy and fixed it; he isn’t your mate – Richard Nyama to Stephen Amoah
25 minutes -
BoGÂ sets strict Ghana Card rule for financial transactions
29 minutes -
Court grants bail to Oyarifa apartment fire suspects
35 minutes -
Kaiser Flats residents protest TDC eviction move
41 minutes -
BoG Governor calls for national reforms to end gold-for-reserves losses
42 minutes -
Ofori-Atta could stay in the US despite ICE arrest – Immigration lawyer explains
47 minutes -
CDM warns against shifting Gold-for-Reserves losses to taxpayers
49 minutes -
CDM accuses government of opaqueness over Gold-for-Reserves losses
1 hour -
Gold-for-Reserves: CDM demands forensic audit after BoG seeks reimbursement
1 hour -
Ofori-Atta detention goes beyond visa overstay – US lawyer reveals FBI role
2 hours -
‘This is not a typical immigration case’ – US lawyer on Ofori-Atta detention
2 hours -
Ofori-Atta travelled to UK and returned to US before ICE arrest – Victor Smith reveals
3 hours -
ICE sees it as a high-profile case, not routine – Ghana’s US High Commissioner on Ofori-Atta detention
3 hours -
ICE confirmed Ken Ofori-Atta was medically fit for detention – Victor Smith
3 hours
