Thousands of mourners gathered to bid a final farewell to former Italian prime minister Silvio Berlusconi.
A state funeral was held in Milan on Wednesday, a national day of mourning, for the divisive and domineering four-time premier, who died on Monday aged 86 in a hospital where he was being treated for chronic leukaemia.
The ceremony was held in the city’s famous Duomo cathedral, with Hungarian President Viktor Orban and Qatar’s ruling emir, Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad al Thani, among the high-ranking foreign dignitaries who attended.
Italian President Sergio Mattarella and Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni – who faced criticism for her government’s decision to hold a state funeral and declare a rare national day of mourning – were also present at the funeral, together with three former Italian leaders.
On Wednesday afternoon, Ms Meloni shared a tribute to her predecessor with her 1.9 million Twitter followers, posting a video with the caption which translated as: “Thanks Silvio. We will not forget you.”
Mr Orban also tweeted a final farewell to the late Italian leader, hailing him as “a great statesman and a true friend”, adding: “Life is emptier without you.”
Crowds filled a piazza outside the Duomo to watch the service on two giant screens, erupting in applause as the casket was lifted out of the hearse and taken into the cathedral.
Mr Berlusconi‘s partner, Marta Fascina, together with his brother, Paolo, and children Luigi, Marina, Barbara, Pier Silvio and Eleonora, were also pictured at the funeral.
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His body will be cremated before his ashes are taken to the family mausoleum in the grounds of his villa in the northern town of Arcore, about 20km northeast of Milan, a family source said.
Mr Berlusconi’s coffin was expected to be transported to Villa San Martino ahead of cremation at the Valenziano Panta Rei Crematorium Temple, near the city of Alessandria.
The mausoleum, built by sculptor Pietro Cascella in the early 1990s, is a white marble building with an underground mortuary. A sarcophagus of the former Italian leader stands at the centre.
Mr Berlusconi’s family held a private wake on Tuesday at one of his villas near Milan.
Paolo Scaroni, the chairman of Mr Berlusconi’s beloved AC Milan football club, together with former players including Giovanni Galli, Demetrio Albertini, Franco Baresi and Daniele Massaro, were among the prominent figures from Italian football in attendance at the funeral.
They were joined by former England manager, Fabio Capello; the president of Lazio, Claudio Lotito; and Napoli owner Aurelio De Laurentiis.
The outpouring of grief comes as Italians remain split over whether Mr Berlusconi’s influence was for the better or worse – and whether he deserved a state funeral.
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In his eulogy, Archbishop of Milan, Mario Delpini, described the former premier as a “businessman who found success and failure, a politician who won and lost, a notoriety-seeking personality who had admirers and detractors, those who applaud him and those who detest him.”
Former European Parliament candidate, Barbara Cacellari, said protests over how to officially mark Mr Berlusconi’s death showed a lack of respect.
“He is a person who represents the history of this country,” she said, adding: “No one is without stains, I think.”
However, critics of Mr Berlusconi, who had an enduring friendship with Vladimir Putin, suggested his leadership has stifled Italy’s growth.
Respected foreign correspondent Beppe Severgnini said the former leader “tapped all of our weaknesses: moral, fiscal, sexual, everything”.