David Thompson's widow Mara (2nd left) and their three daughters Oya (3rd left), Misha (4th left) and Osa-Marie, along with his nephew Dario (5th left) and Mara's sister Jeanine McIntyre (left) watch as the casket bearing the late Barbados prime minister's body is interred during his State Funeral yesterday in that Eastern Caribbean country. Caricom leaders, among them Jamaica's Prime Minister Bruce Golding (8th left) share in the sombre moment. (Photo: Barbados Nation)
BRIDGETOWN, Barbados (AP) Thousands of mourners, many weeping, lined the streets of Barbados' capital yesterday to catch a glimpse of the flag-draped coffin of Prime Minister David Thompson, who lost a year-long fight with pancreatic cancer.
Crisply uniformed soldiers marched alongside a white hearse holding Thompson as it slowly drove into the Kensington Oval cricket stadium for an emotional state funeral.
Barbados-born pop star Rihanna and Jamaican reggae singer Luciano joined Thompson's relatives, friends and various regional leaders to bid a final farewell to the leader who led his Democratic Labour Party to victory in 2008 elections.
The 48-year-old Thompson, who became prime minister of this Caribbean nation of 270,000 people in January 2008, died October 23 at his private residence in St Philip. He had been ill since March and travelled to New York several times for treatment.
Jamaican Prime Minister Bruce Golding, who is also chairman of the Caribbean Community (Caricom) bloc, told mourners that the region "has been left much poorer for the loss of one of its distinguished leaders".
"All of us... will miss his wise counsel, his timely and effective interventions, his calmness even in contentious debates and that frankness that was so often tempered with his inimitable dry humour," Golding said.
Thompson had declined to discuss his condition until September, when his doctor revealed that the island's leader was undergoing chemotherapy for pancreatic cancer.
Shortly before his death, Thompson reshuffled his Cabinet to pass many of his responsibilities to other ministers. He made the announcement during a radio address instead of going on camera so islanders would focus on his message, not his appearance.
Freundel Stuart, who was attorney general and deputy prime minister, succeeded Thompson as prime minister.