Pemakaman kenegaraan: Perbedaan antara revisi

Konten dihapus Konten ditambahkan
M.Adha.Verel (bicara | kontrib)
→‎Belgia: Perbaikan kesalahan pengetikan, penambahan konten
Tag: Suntingan perangkat seluler Suntingan peramban seluler
M.Adha.Verel (bicara | kontrib)
→‎Bekas Yugoslavia: Perbaikan kesalahan pengetikan, penambahan konten
Tag: Suntingan perangkat seluler Suntingan peramban seluler
Baris 612:
The most recent state funeral was that of [[Winston Churchill|Sir Winston Churchill]] in 1965. Although technically following her divorce from the Prince of Wales in 1996, [[Diana, Princess of Wales]] was no longer a member of the Royal Family, and as such not entitled to a state or ceremonial funeral, the large outpouring of public grief following her death led then-Prime Minister [[Tony Blair]] to recommend a ceremonial funeral because she was the mother of Princes [[Prince William, Duke of Cambridge|William]] and [[Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex|Harry]], who were then respectively second and third in the [[line of succession to the British throne]]. [[Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother]] and [[Margaret Thatcher|Margaret, Baroness Thatcher]] also received ceremonial funerals.
 
==={{flagicon|YUG}} ExBekas Yugoslavia ===
{{main article|DeathKematian anddan funeralpemakaman ofkenegaraan Josip Broz Tito}}
A massive state funeral was held for the late President [[Josip Broz Tito]] on 8 May 1980 in [[Belgrade]], the capital city of the [[Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia|SFR Yugoslavia]]. It was the largest funeral of a statesman in the 20th century, with 129 delegations from all around the world.Tito's funeral drew many statesmen to Belgrade. Notably absent statesmen from funeral were Jimmy Carter and Fidel Castro. His death came in the moment when Soviet invasion of Afghanistan ended American-Soviet détente. Yugoslavia, although a communist state, was non-aligned during the Cold War and fearful that the nation might be invaded like Czechoslovakia and Afghanistan. After learning that Chinese Premier Hua Guofeng would lead the delegation of China, ailing Leonid Brezhnev decided to lead the Soviet delegation. In order to avoid meeting with Leonid Brezhnev and the middle of electoral campaign for the 1980 United States Presidential election, Carter opted to send his mother Lilian Carter and Vice President Walter Mondale as heads of the US delegation. After realizing that leaders of all Warsaw Pact nations would attend the funeral, Carter's decision was criticized by Presidential candidate George H. W. Bush as sign that the United States "inferentially slams Yugoslavs at time that country has pulled away from Soviet Union".[10] Carter visited Yugoslavia later in June 1980 and made a visit to Tito's grave.[11][12]