Thousands say goodbye to Ali cortege

Thousands are attending a farewell procession for boxing legend Muhammad Ali in his home city of Louisville, in the US state of Kentucky.

Onlookers lining the roadside waved, took photos and chanted “Ali, Ali” as a cortege led by the hearse carrying his coffin drove past.

The heavyweight champion and rights activist died last Friday aged 74.

The cortege is taking Ali’s body past key sites in his life, ahead of an interfaith memorial service.

Actor Will Smith and ex-boxer Lennox Lewis will be among the pallbearers, while former President Bill Clinton will deliver one of the eulogies.

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Free tickets for the 18,000-strong memorial service, taking place at a major sports centre, were snapped up within half an hour.

Map of Muhammad Ali's funeral procession

The motorcade procession began at about 10:35 local time (14:35 GMT), more than an hour behind schedule, and will take the coffin past his childhood home, the Ali Center, the Center for African American Heritage and then down Muhammad Ali Boulevard.

The procession, expected to take about 90 minutes, will end at the Cave Hill Cemetery where Ali will be laid to rest in a private ceremony.

The funeral service at the KFC Yum! Centre is due to begin at 14:00 local time.


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Comedian Billy Crystal will also deliver a eulogy, while sports journalist Bryant Gumbel, the daughter of civil rights activist Malcolm X, Attallah Shabazz, and Ali’s wife, Lonnie, and daughters, Maryum and Rasheda, are also expected to speak.

Among those expected to attend the service is King Abdullah of Jordan.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan attended Thursday’s prayer ceremony and had been due at the service, but reports say he has cut short his visit to the US.

The reasons for his departure are not clear, though there are reports of differences with the funeral’s organisers.

President Barack Obama will not be there, as he is to attend his eldest daughter Malia’s graduation.

But in a video message, he said: “This week we lost an icon. A person who for African Americans, I think, liberated their minds in recognising that they could be proud of who they were.”

White House senior adviser Valerie Jarrett – who knew Ali – will represent the president.

Lennox Lewis, a former world heavyweight boxing champion himself, said it was an honour to be a pallbearer and that Ali’s memory would never fade.

“The term ‘float like a butterfly, sting like a bee’ will always be remembered. He is an icon and a legend of boxing,” he said.

The other pallbearers are family and friends, along with Will Smith, who portrayed Ali in the 2001 film about the boxer’s life.

Abi Ajram, 48, who has made a 4,000-mile trip from London to pay his respects, told PA: “I feel Muhammad Ali deserved the world turning up for him. He was the number one.”

The funeral service will be streamed live online.

One sour note was the report that some people were trying to sell the free tickets to the service on the internet.

Ali family spokesman Bob Gunnell said he was “personally disgusted” at attempts to profit from the event.

‘Teaching moment’

The funeral events began on Thursday with a Muslim prayer service attended by 14,000 people.

Ali's childhood home in Louisville

Ali’s childhood home has been a focal point for those paying respect

The casket with the body of Muhammad Ali is prayed over by thousands

Some 14,000 attended the Muslim prayer service on Thursday

Don King and Sugar Ray Leonard, 9 June

Don King and Sugar Ray Leonard were among those at Thursday’s service

Ali wanted the service, known as a Jenazah, to be “a teaching moment”, according to Imam Zaid Shakir, who led it.

Muslim scholar Sherman Jackson said: “The passing of Muhammad Ali has made us all feel a little more alone in the world. Something solid, something big, beautiful and life-affirming has left.”

Boxing promoter Don King, civil rights leader Jesse Jackson and singer Yusuf Islam, formerly known as Cat Stevens, were among those at the event.

American Muslims attending the service and watching on TV said they hoped that the public prayers would help Americans to become more familiar with Islam and its practices.

In 1964, Ali famously converted to Islam, changing his name from Cassius Clay, which he called his “slave name”.

He first joined the Nation of Islam, a controversial black separatist movement, before later converting to mainstream Islam.

In his boxing career, he fought a total of 61 times as a professional, losing five times and winning 37 bouts by knockout.

Soon after retiring, rumours began to circulate about the state of his health.

Parkinson’s Syndrome was eventually diagnosed but Ali continued to make public appearances, receiving warm welcomes wherever he travelled.

He lit the Olympic cauldron at the 1996 Games in Atlanta and carried the Olympic flag at the opening ceremony for the 2012 Games in London.

He was crowned “Sportsman of the Century” by Sports Illustrated and “Sports Personality of the Century” by the BBC.

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