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Yeltsin buried with full state honours

Pallbearers carry the coffin of former Russian President Boris Yeltsin at the Novodevichy cemetery in Moscow, yesterday.

Pallbearers carry the coffin of former Russian President Boris Yeltsin at the Novodevichy cemetery in Moscow, yesterday.

Boris Yeltsin's sobbing widow stooped over his open coffin to kiss his face yesterday before the first president of independent Russia was lowered into the ground to the boom of a six-gun salute.

In an ironic twist for a man who tore up seven decades of Soviet rule, as Boris Yeltsin was buried a military band played a few bars of the Soviet anthem: a tune he scrapped but which his successor Vladimir Putin restored as Russia's national anthem.

Watched by mourners including Vladimir Putin, former US President Bill Clinton and Polish Solidarity leader Lech Walesa, Naina, Yeltsin's wife of 50 years, lingered for at least a minute at the graveside caressing his face.

The coffin lid was then secured and as Russian Orthodox priests in elaborately embroidered robes wafted incense around Moscow's Novodevichye cemetery, Boris Yeltsin was lowered into the grave.

Crowds of onlookers gathered outside the cemetery to see Yeltsin's coffin arrive, pulled on a gun carriage by an armoured vehicle and flanked by goose-stepping soldiers.

A bear-like man who had an easy rapport with ordinary people, Mr Yeltsin became a hero to many Russians when he clambered onto a tank in 1991 to defy hardline Soviet coup leaders who wanted to roll back the perestroika reforms.

But in office he disappointed. His economic "shock therapy" turned peoples' savings into worthless paper, state assets were sold off to favoured businessmen at a fraction of their true value and his government was in turmoil.

In his last years in office, heart problems - and reported drinking binges - made Mr Yeltsin a bumbling and distant figure prone to embarrassing gaffes.

"My parents dislike him because they liked living in the Soviet Union," said Olesya, in her 20s, as she placed a bunch of yellow tulips at the closed gates of the cemetery. But she added, "I was also born in the Soviet Union but I like having a choice and that is what Boris Nikolayevich (Yeltsin) gave me."

Befitting a man who broke with Communism, Mr Yeltsin became the first Russian head of state since Tsar Alexander III in 1894 to be seen off in a church funeral.

The service was held in the cathedral of Christ the Saviour, a vast gold-domed building. Josef Stalin dynamited the original church but under Boris Yeltsin it was rebuilt on the same site as a symbol of Russia's revival.

At a Kremlin reception after the burial, Vladimir Putin said Boris Yeltsin had "earnestly tried to make the life of millions of Russians better... Personalities like that do not go away. They live on in peoples' ideas and ambitions."

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