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Thus Dag Hammarskjold was buried, with ceremony usually accorded to Swedish kings, at Uppsala, the city where he grew up and studied. It had been a long way home: 5,000 miles from Ndola. the small Rhodesian town where the Secretary-General had been bound to negotiate peace in Katanga. When the body arrived in Stockholm aboard an American DC-yC, 250,000 mourners gathered for a torchlight procession. At Uppsala the closed casket, nearly buried in flowers, was placed in the 13th century Lutheran cathedral, where 15,000 townfolk came to say their farewells...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: World: A Royal Funeral | 10/6/1961 | See Source »

Post-Mortems. Given Katanga's fierce animosity toward the U.N. and Hammarskjold, not to mention The Lone Ranger's known presence, the world immediately suspected that the crash was no accident. The Rhodesian government ordered a full investigation-including complete post-mortem examination of every body, although all but Hammarskjold's had been charred beyond recognition...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: World: Death at Ndola | 9/29/1961 | See Source »

...climbed aboard the Albertina, a white DC-6 used by the U.N. in the Congo. Hammarskjold's main concern, on takeoff, was ominous: his plane had to cross territory controlled by a marauding Katanga jet fighter known as "The Lone Ranger." The pilot, thought to be Rhodesian or an English-speaking Belgian, had been terrorizing U.N. garrisons since the beginning of the fighting, had even made strafing passes at a press conference given by U.N. Katanga Commander Conor Cruise O'Brien in Elisabethville...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: World: Death at Ndola | 9/29/1961 | See Source »

...plane that refused to identify itself, asking permission to drop to 6,000 ft. When nothing more was heard from the plane, Ndola assumed it had veered away and landed at another field. Not until nine hours later were air search parties called out, and at 3 p.m., a Rhodesian scout plane radioed back the news: the Albertina had crashed in a dense forest less than seven miles from the end of the Ndola runway. Hammarskjold's body was found a few yards from the charred wreckage. There was one survivor: U.N. Security Guard Harold Julien, who was almost...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: World: Death at Ndola | 9/29/1961 | See Source »

...bodies of potential victims. Later a lorry arrives. When its horn blows, all those marked will be irresistibly drawn toward it and abducted, later to be injected with a solution that transforms them immediately into swine. "We must believe that the Europeans have invented this thing," explained one Southern Rhodesian native, "because only Africans have fallen before its evil...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Southern Rhodesia: Pigs for Burumatare | 7/14/1961 | See Source »

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