The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Relics picked from late King Bhumibol’s ashes

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BANGKOK: Thailand’s new king picked bits of bone and ash from his father’s remains yesterday to be enshrined as royal relics, after the cremation of the late King Bhumibol Adulyadej capped an extravagan­t funeral that brought the nation to a standstill.

The lighting of the funeral pyre late Thursday night, which was held out of view, closed the book on the 70-year reign of a monarch who was elevated to saint-like status.

The grand send-off, held a year after Bhumibol died aged 88, was a spectacula­r show of the elaborate, enigmatic rituals that gird a powerful monarchy cloaked in myth and spirituali­ty.

On Friday Bhumibol’s son and successor, 65-year-old King Maha Vajiralong­korn, ascended the steps of the glistening crematoriu­m complex to select relics from his father’s ashes.

The monarch poured fragrant water on the pile of remains, before placing fragments of bone into six golden, diamond-encrusted urns that were then carried in palanquins by a colourful procession to the Grand Palace.

The five-day funeral, which concludes on Sunday and cost some US$90 million, has seized the attention of a nation where love for Bhumibol runs deep.

About 300,000 mourners in black crammed into Bangkok’s old quarter to get close to the four-hour procession on Thursday that delivered the funeral urn to the decorated crematoriu­m.

Mourning stretched far across the country, with more than 19 million Thais — nearly a third of the population — joining funeral rites to lay sandalwood flowers in symbolic contributi­ons to the cremation.

Others have tuned in to televised broadcasts of the procession­s, monk-led rituals and traditiona­l art performanc­es marking Bhumibol’s send-off to heaven.

But the funeral’s climax — the lighting of the pyre — was not aired live Thursday night as most media were whisked away from the area and official broadcasts turned to dance and folk theatre shows that ran through the night.

Later in the evening, smoke could be seen billowing out from the illuminate­d funeral pyre.

“When I turned back to the crematoriu­m and saw the smoking rising, I cried automatica­lly, like someone had pushed a button,” said Narongdech Mokmek, a 33year-old teacher from Supan Buri province.

He was among tens of thousands who had spent several nights camped outside the purposebui­lt crematoriu­m complex in Bangkok’s old quarter.

The passing of Bhumibol, an anchor of stability across decades of political tumult, has ushered Thailand into a new era laden with uncertaint­y.

The new monarch has yet to command the same level of devotion from a people split by political rivalries. — AFP

 ?? — Reuters photo ?? A royal palanquin is carried by soldiers during a procession to transfer the royal relics and ashes of late King Bhumibol from the crematoriu­m to the Grand Palace in Bangkok,Thailand.
— Reuters photo A royal palanquin is carried by soldiers during a procession to transfer the royal relics and ashes of late King Bhumibol from the crematoriu­m to the Grand Palace in Bangkok,Thailand.
 ?? — AFP photo ?? Thai King Maha Vajiralong­korn sorts through the remains of his father, the late Thai king Bhumibol Adulyadej, the morning after he was cremated at the Royal Crematoriu­m of the Grand Palace in Bangkok.
— AFP photo Thai King Maha Vajiralong­korn sorts through the remains of his father, the late Thai king Bhumibol Adulyadej, the morning after he was cremated at the Royal Crematoriu­m of the Grand Palace in Bangkok.

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