Tito's funeral drew many statesmen to Belgrade. Two notably absent statesmen were
President of the United States Jimmy Carter and
First Secretary of the Communist Party of Cuba Fidel Castro. His death came just as the
1979 Soviet invasion of Afghanistan had ended the American-Soviet
détente. Yugoslavia, though a communist state, was non-aligned during the
Cold War due to the
Tito-Stalin split in 1948. After learning that
Chinese Communist Party chairman
Hua Guofeng would lead the
Chinese delegation, the ailing
Soviet general secretary Leonid Brezhnev decided to lead his nation's delegation. In order to avoid meeting Brezhnev whilst in the middle of his 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 a sign that the United States "inferentially slams Yugoslavs at time that country has pulled away from Soviet Union". Carter visited Yugoslavia later in June 1980 and made a visit to Tito's grave.
Helmut Schmidt,
chancellor of West Germany, was highly active at the funeral, meeting with Brezhnev,
East Germany's
Erich Honecker, and
Poland's
Edward Gierek. British prime minister
Margaret Thatcher sought to rally world leaders in order to harshly condemn the Soviet invasion. While she was in Belgrade, she held talks with
Kenneth Kaunda, Schmidt,
Francesco Cossiga, and
Nicolae Ceaușescu. Brezhnev met with
Kim Il Sung and Honecker.
James Callaghan, leader of the British
Labour Party, explained his presence in Belgrade as an attempt to warm relations between his party and Yugoslav communists, which was severed more than a decade ago after dissident
Milovan Đilas was welcomed by
Jennie Lee, Minister for the Arts under
Harold Wilson. Mondale avoided the Soviets, ignoring Brezhnev while passing close to him. Soviet and Chinese delegations also avoided each other. During the funeral,
Yasser Arafat tapped on the shoulder of
Margaret Thatcher, after which she swung and shook his hand. Thatcher later stated that she could never forgive herself for shaking his hand.
List of delegations Source:
Sovereign states Heads of state The following delegations were led by their respective
heads of state: • :
Chadli Bendjedid (
President),
Mohammed Seddik Benyahia (Minister of Foreign Affairs) • :
Rudolf Kirchschläger (
President),
Bruno Kreisky (
Federal Chancellor),
Willibald Pahr (
Foreign Minister) • :
Ziaur Rahman (
President),
Muhammad Shamsul Haque (
Minister of Foreign Affairs) • :
King Baudouin,
Wilfried Martens (
Prime Minister),
Henri Simonet (
Minister of Foreign Affairs) •
Bulgaria:
Todor Zhivkov (
Chairman of the State Council) • :
Edward Schreyer (
Governor General),
Jean Marchand (
Speaker of the Senate) •
Czechoslovakia:
Gustáv Husák (
President),
Miloš Jakeš (First Secretary of the
Communist Party),
Bohuslav Chňoupek (
Ministers of Foreign Affairs) •
Ethiopia:
Mengistu Haile Mariam (
Chairman of the Derg) • :
Urho Kekkonen (
President),
Paavo Väyrynen (
Minister of Foreign Affairs) • :
Konstantinos Tsatsos (
President),
Agamemnon Gratzios (
Chief of the National Defence General Staff) • :
Ahmed Sékou Touré (
President),
Moussa Diakité (Foreign minister) • :
Luís Cabral (
President),
Constantino Teixeira (Commissar of Internal Affairs) •
Hungary:
János Kádár (General Secretary of the
Hungarian Socialist Workers' Party) •
Iraq:
Saddam Hussein (
President),
Sa'dun Hammadi (Foreign Minister) • :
Patrick Hillery (
President),
George Colley (
Tánaiste) • :
Sandro Pertini (
President),
Francesco Cossiga (
Prime Minister),
Oddo Biasini (
Minister of Culture) • :
King Hussein,
Abdelhamid Sharaf (
Prime Minister) • :
Spyros Kyprianou (
President),
Nicos A. Rolandis (
Foreign Minister) • :
Kim Il Sung (
General Secretary of the Workers' Party of Korea and
President),
Ho Dam (
Foreign Minister),
O Jin-u (
Minister of Defence) •
Democratic Kampuchea:
Khieu Samphan (
President of the State Presidium and
Prime Minister),
Teng Sang (Vice President) • Note: This delegation represented the UN-recognized government of Cambodia (
Democratic Kampuchea), although in 1980 Cambodia was
de facto ruled as the
People's Republic of Kampuchea. • :
Jean (
Grand Duke),
Gaston Thorn (
Foreign Minister and
Deputy Prime Minister) • :
Moussa Traoré (
President),
Alioune Blondin Beye (
Foreign Minister) • :
Anton Buttigieg (
President) • :
Erich Honecker (
General Secretary of the Central Committee and the Chairman of the State Council),
Oskar Fischer (
Minister of Foreign Affairs),
Manfred Flegel (Deputy Chairmen of the
Council of Ministers) • :
Karl Carstens (
President),
Helmut Schmidt (
Chancellor),
Hans-Dietrich Genscher (
Foreign Minister) • :
King Olav V,
Odvar Nordli (
Prime Minister) • :
Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq (
President),
Riaz Piracha (
Foreign Secretary) • :
Arístides Royo (
President),
Carlos Osores (
Foreign Minister) • :
Edward Gierek (
First Secretary of the Polish United Workers' Party),
Wojciech Jaruzelski (
Minister of National Defence) • :
António Ramalho Eanes (
President),
Francisco de Sá Carneiro (
Prime Minister) •
Romania:
Nicolae Ceaușescu (
President),
Ilie Verdeț (
Prime Minister),
Ștefan Andrei (
Minister of Foreign Affairs) • :
Pietro Chiaruzzi and
Primo Marani (
Captains Regent) • :
Leonid Brezhnev (
General Secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party,
Chairman of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet),
Andrei Gromyko (
Ministry of Foreign Affairs) • :
King Carl XVI Gustaf,
Ola Ullsten (
Minister for Foreign Affairs) • :
Hafez al-Assad (
President),
Abdul Halim Khaddam (
Minister of Foreign Affairs and
Deputy Prime Minister) • :
Julius Nyerere (
President),
Benjamin Mkapa (
Minister of Foreign Affairs) • :
Gnassingbé Eyadéma (
President) • :
Kenneth Kaunda (
President),
Wilson M. Chakulya (
Minister of Foreign Affairs)
Deputy heads of state The following delegations were headed by deputies to heads of state (including vice presidents) or representatives of monarchs: • :
Carlos Rafael Rodríguez (Vice President of the
Council of State),
Isidoro Malmierca Peoli (
Foreign Minister) • :
Henrik (
Prince Consort),
Kjeld Olesen (
Foreign Minister) • :
Hosni Mubarak (
Vice President) • :
Joseph W.S. deGraft-Johnson (
Vice-President),
Isaac Chinebuah (
Minister for Foreign Affairs),
William Ofori Atta (Government Minister) • :
Adam Malik (
Vice President) •
Madagascar: Charles Ravoajanakhari (Vice President of the
Supreme Revolutionary Council) • :
Prince Claus (
Prince consort),
Prince Bernhard (former
Prince consort),
Dries van Agt (
Prime Minister),
Chris van der Klaauw (
Minister of Foreign Affairs) • :
Prince Philip (
Consort of the Queen),
Margaret Thatcher (
Prime Minister),
Lord Carrington (
Foreign Secretary),
Fitzroy Maclean (wartime British liaison to Yugoslav Partisans, personal friend of Tito) • :
Walter Mondale (
Vice President),
Lillian Gordy Carter (mother of President
Jimmy Carter) and
W. Averell Harriman (former
Governor of
New York) • : Qadi Abdel (Vice President)
Heads of government The following delegations were headed by heads of government: •
Burma:
Maung Maung Kha (
Prime Minister) • :
Pedro Pires (
Prime Minister) • :
Hua Guofeng (
Chairman of the Chinese Communist Party and
Premier of China),
Ji Pengfei (
Secretary General of the State Council) • :
Raymond Barre (
Prime Minister),
Jean François-Poncet (
Minister of Foreign Affairs) • :
Indira Gandhi (
Prime Minister) • :
Masayoshi Ōhira (
Prime Minister), Yasure Katoi (
Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs) •
Mongolia:
Jambyn Batmönkh (
Prime Minister) • :
Pedro Richter Prada (
Prime Minister) • :
Adolfo Suárez (
Prime Minister),
Marcelino Oreja (
Minister of Foreign Affairs) • :
Süleyman Demirel (
Prime Minister),
Hayrettin Erkmen (
Foreign Minister) • :
Robert Mugabe (
Prime Minister)
Deputy heads of government and foreign ministers The following delegations were headed by deputy heads of government or their foreign ministers: •
Afghanistan:
Sultan Ali Keshtmand (First Deputy Chairman of the
Council of Ministers),
Shah Mohamad Dost (
Foreign Minister) • :
Andrew Peacock (
Minister for Foreign Affairs) • :
Gaston Aroas Levi (
Foreign Minister) • :
José Ferraz de Rosa (Army General, State Minister, and General Chief of Staff),
Otto Agripino Maia (
Foreign Minister) • :
Jean Keutcha (
Foreign Minister) • :
Ptolemy Reid (Deputy Prime Minister) • :
Sadegh Ghotbzadeh (
Minister of Foreign Affairs) • :
Harold Edward Water (Foreign Minister) • :
Enrique Olivares Santana (
Secretary of the Interior),
Luis M. Farías (
President of the Chamber of Deputies) •
Nepal: Prince
Gyanendra of Nepal and
K. B. Shahi (
Minister of Foreign Affairs) • :
Ishaya Audu (
Minister of Foreign Affairs),
Joseph Wayas (
President of the Senate) • :
Miguel d'Escoto Brockmann (Foreign Minister) • :
Brian Talboys (
Deputy Prime Minister and
Minister of Foreign Affairs) • :
Jacques Hodoul (
Minister for Foreign Affairs) • :
Abdul Cader Shahul Hameed (
Minister of External Affairs) • :
Pierre Aubert (
Foreign Minister) • :
Thanat Khoman (Deputy Prime Minister) • :
Otema Allimadi (
Foreign Minister) • :
José Zambrano Velasco (
Minister of Foreign Affairs) • :
Huỳnh Tấn Phát (
Deputy Prime Minister)
Other state delegations State delegations of those countries were headed by government ministers, ambassadors or royal house members: • : Sokrat Plaka (ambassador to Yugoslavia) • :
Ambrósio Lukoki (Minister of Education and Member of the Politburo of
MPLA),
Afonso Van-Dunem (Member of the Central Committee of
MPLA) • : Alberto Rodríguez Varela (
Minister of Justice) •
Benin:
Tonakpon Capo-Chichi (Minister of Culture) and
Agbahe Gregoire (Minister of Tourism and Crafts) • : A. V. Kgarebe (High Commissioner to the United Kingdom) • : Reni Nkonkengurute (Member of the Politburo and Presidium of the Central Committee of the
Union for National Progress, Minister for Presidency affairs) • : General Mbale (Minister of Internal Affairs) • :
Gustavo Balcázar Monzón (
Colombia Ambassador to the United Kingdom) •
Congo:
Jean Ganga Zansou (
President of the National Assembly) • : Fernando Aldman (Minister of Economy) • : Mario Aleman (Sub-secretary of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs) • : Abaga Julian Esono (Ambassador to France) • : Jean Robert Fungu (Ambassador to Yugoslavia) • :
Ingvi Sigurður Ingvarsson (Ambassador to Sweden, non-resident Ambassador to Yugoslavia) • : K. Nalobamba (State Minister), Tousagnon Benoit (vice-president of the National Assembly) • : K. G. Hill (Ambassador to Geneva, non-resident Ambassador to Yugoslavia) • : J. H. Okvanyo (Trade minister) • : Sheikh Abdullah al Jaber (Special emissary of Emir
Jaber al Ahmad) • : Ali el Khalil (Minister of Finance) • : Robert Kvele Kennedy (Ambassador to Rome, non-resident Ambassador to Yugoslavia) •
Libya:
Abu-Bakr Yunis Jabr (Minister of Defence, General of Army) • : Walter Oehry (Government Minister) • : Ahmed Zaki (Permanent Representatives to the UN) • :
Abdul Taib Mahmud (Minister of Defence) • : Mohamme Ulg el-Hussein (Minister) • : Dej Ould Sidi (President of Parliament), Mohammed Doniri (Minister of Supplies) •
Mozambique: Marcelino dos Santos (Member of the Central Committee of
FRELIMO, member of the Parliament Standing Committee) • : Mahamane Karmou (Ambassador to USSR, non-resident Ambassador to Yugoslavia) • : Fahad bin Mahmoud Al-Said (Under-secretary of judicial affairs) • :
Leon Ma. Guerrero (Ambassador to Yugoslavia) • : Jules Kanadra (Ambassador to Moscow, non-resident Ambassador to Yugoslavia) • : Brata da Coste (Member of the Coordinating council of the
MLSTP/PSD, Minister for Planning) • : Maggat Lo (President of the Economic-social committee of the Parliament), Mohammed Li (Government Minister) • : Philip Faboe (Secretary of State) • :
David Marshall (Ambassador to France) •
Somalia:
Ismail Ali Abokor (
President of the People's Assembly, and Member of the Politburo of the Central Committee of the
Somali Revolutionary Socialist Party) • : M. S. Muti (Member of the Politburo and Secretary of the Central Committee of the
Yemeni Socialist Party), A. R. Ratib (Member of the Politburo) •
Sudan: Sherif Ghasim (Member of the Politburo of the
Sudanese Socialist Union) • : James O'Neil (Ambassador to Belgium, non-resident Ambassador to Yugoslavia) • :
Sadok Mokaddem (
President of the Assembly, and Member of the Politburo of the
Socialist Destourian Party) and
Habib Bourguiba, Jr. • :
Tiemoko Marc Garango (Ambassador to West Germany, non-resident Ambassador to Yugoslavia) • :
Walter Ravenna (Minister of National Defence) • :
Achille Silvestrini (Secretary of the
Council for Public Affairs of the Church) • :
Nzondomyo a' Dokpe Lingo (
President of the National Assembly)
Delegations of parties and organizations International organizations • :
Chedli Klibi (
Secretary-General) •
European Parliament:
Simone Veil (
President) •
Council of Europe:
Franz Karasek (
Secretary General) •
European Commission:
Wilhelm Haferkamp (
Vice-President) • :
Shridath Ramphal (
Secretary-General) •
OECD:
Emiel van Lennep (Secretary-General) • :
Kurt Waldheim (
Secretary-General),
P. N. Dhar • :
Amadou-Mahtar M'Bow (Director-General)
Liberation movements •
Palestine Liberation Organization:
Yasser Arafat (
Chairman) •
Polisario Front:
Mohamed Abdelaziz (
Chairman of the Revolutionary Council) •
SWAPO:
David Meroro (President of the People's Assembly)
Political parties and trade unions •
Communist Party of Australia:
Bernie Taft (Secretary) •
Labour Party of Australia: Jane Taggart •
Communist Party of Austria:
Franz Muhri (president) and Josef Nichel-Vizer (Member of the Central Committee) •
Bangladesh Awami League: Kamal Hosein •
Communist Party of Belgium:
Louis Van Geyt (president), Jean Debruvere (Member of the Politbureau) •
Socialist Party (Belgium):
André Cools (president),
Irène Pétry (member of the National Bureau, Vice President of the
Socialist International, President of the
Socialist International Women) •
Communist Party of Chile: Milo Carres Orlando (Member of the Politbureau) •
Socialist Party of Chile:
Carlos Altamirano (Secretary), Clodomiro Almeida (Secretary) •
Popular Unitary Action Movement: Ricardo Lopez •
Radical Party of Chile: Benjamin Tekliski (Executive Secretary) •
Communist Party of Denmark:
Jørgen Jensen (president), Hans Kloster (member of the Central Committee) •
Socialist People's Party of Denmark:
Gert Petersen (president) •
Dominican Revolutionary Party: Francisco Pena Gomez • Labor Party of Egypt: Hamid Zidani • Arab Trade Unions (Egypt): Fati Mohammad (Secretary-General) •
Communist Party of France:
Georges Marchais (Secretary general) • French
Socialist Party:
François Mitterrand (First secretary),
Lionel Jospin (National Secretary) • French
Unified Socialist Party: Maurice Revenel (National secretary), Victor Ledik (National secretary) •
French Democratic Confederation of Labour:
Edmond Maire (Secretary-General ), Jacques Chereque (Deputy Secretary-General) •
General Confederation of Labour (France): Gerard Gomez (National Secretary) • French
Radical Party of the Left: Francois Lissere •
People's National Party (Ghana): Nana Okutwer Beko (president) •
Communist Party of Greece (Interior):
Babis Drakopoulos (Secretary General) •
Communist Party of Greece:
Charilaos Florakis (Secretary General) •
United Democratic Left (Greece):
Manolis Glezos •
Party of Democratic Socialism (Greece):
Yagos Pesmazoglou, Georgios Milonas, Charalambos Protopapas •
PASOK:
Andreas Papandreou (President) •
General Confederation of Greek Workers: Nicholas Papageorgiou (President) •
Communist Party of the Netherlands:
Henk Hoekstra (chairman) •
Labour Party (Netherlands):
Joop den Uyl (Parliamentary group leader) •
Communist Party of Ireland:
Andy Barr (president) •
Communist Party of Italy:
Enrico Berlinguer (Secretary General) •
Italian Socialist Party:
Bettino Craxi (Secretary General) •
Italian Democratic Socialist Party:
Ruggero Puletti (deputy Secretary-General),
Giuseppe Amadei •
Proletarian Unity Party (Italy) and the
Workers Movement for Socialism:
Lucio Magri (Secretary-General),
Luca Cafiero (Secretary) •
Christian Democracy (Italy):
Vito Lattanzio •
Japanese Communist Party: Kamejiro Senaga, Sakundo Onuma •
Socialist Party of Japan: Tomio Kawahami, Eiji Yasai •
African National Congress: Thomas Nkobi •
Colombian Communist Party: Alvaro Delgado •
Lebanese Communist Party:
Nicolas Shawi (Secretary General) •
Progressive Socialist Party:
Walid Jumblatt (President) •
Socialist Union of Popular Forces:
Abderahime Buabid (Secretary General) •
Party of Progress and Socialism (Morocco):
Ali Yata (Secretary General) •
Communist Party of Mauritius: Chandramun (President) •
Mexican Communist Party: Marcos Leonel Pasades (Member of the executive committee) •
German Communist Party:
Herbert Mies, Carlos Schroder •
Social Democratic Party of Germany:
Willy Brandt (President, President of the
Socialist International) •
National Party of Nigeria:
Augustus Akinloye (President) •
Portuguese Communist Party:
Álvaro Cunhal (Secretary General) •
Socialist Party (Portugal):
Mário Soares (Secretary General) •
Left-wing Union for the Socialist Democracy (Portugal):
António Lopes Cardoso (Secretary General) •
Sammarinese Communist Party:
Umberto Barulli (Secretary General) •
Sammarinese Socialist Party: Giuseppe della Balda •
Syrian Communist Party: Daniel Neme •
Communist Party of Spain:
Santiago Carrillo (Secretary General) •
Spanish Socialist Workers' Party:
Felipe González (Secretary General) •
Unión General de Trabajadores (Spain): Anton Valentin •
Sri Lanka Freedom Party:
Sirimavo Bandaranaike (President) •
Swiss Party of Labour:
Jean Vincent (honorary President) •
Progressive Organizations of Switzerland: Georg Degen •
Left Party – the Communists (Sweden):
Lars Werner (President), Bo Hammar (member of the Politbureau) •
Swedish Social Democratic Party:
Sten Andersson (Secretary) •
Republican People's Party (Turkey):
Bülent Ecevit (President) •
Communist Party of Britain:
Gordon McLennan (Secretary General) •
Labour Party (UK):
James Callaghan (Leader) == Media coverage ==