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Cambodia mourns beloved ex-king

Tearful Cambodians wore black ribbons and flags flew at half mast on Tuesday as the nation mourned the death of revered ex-king Norodom Sihanouk and prepared for the return of his body from China.

Sihanouk, who steered his country through decades of painful political and social upheavals, from independence to war, the Khmer Rouge terror and finally peace, died after suffering a heart attack in Beijing yesterday. He was 89.

His body is set to be brought back to his homeland on tomorrow where it will lie in state at the royal palace in Phnom Penh for three months ahead of a lavish funeral, according to government officials.

Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen, in a condolence letter to Sihanouk’s wife Queen Monique and his son, current King Norodom Sihamoni, praised the ‘remarkable and incomparable’ former monarch who will be remembered by his compatriots ‘for eternity’.

Hun Sen and Sihamoni are in Beijing, where Sihanouk had been staying since January for medical treatment, to collect the body.

The former king remained popular despite his abrupt abdication in 2004, on the grounds of old age and poor health, and his reputation for somewhat erratic political manoeuvres including his ill fated backing of the Khmer Rouge before he himself was locked up by the murderous hardline communist movement. In the Cambodian capital, mourners young and old flocked to the park outside the palace to pay their respects.

‘I miss him. I came here to cry and release my sorrow.

Under his reign we lived happily, he never hurt anyone,’ 58-year-old Sam Sivorn told AFP, in comments that reflect many Cambodians’ impression of the king as a benevolent leader, despite controversies including Sihanouk’s harsh crackdowns on critics.

 Many elderly Cambodians fondly recall the 1950s and 1960s as a golden era, when Sihanouk, who ascended the throne in 1941 aged just 18, led the country to independence from France and a rare period of political stability.  
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