Slobodan Milosevic was laid to rest Saturday beneath a tree at the family 
estate in his hometown, a quiet end for a man blamed for ethnic wars that killed 
250,000 people in one of the turbulent Balkans' bloodiest chapters. 
 
 
 ![Serb girl Jelena Tmusic wears a Serbian uniform as she kisses the grave of former Serbian leader Slobodan Milosevic during the funeral in his hometown of Pozarevac, some 50 kilometers (30 miles) southeast of Belgrade, Saturday, March 18, 2006. [AP]](xin_49030319090452417491.jpg)  Serb girl 
 Jelena Tmusic wears a Serbian uniform as she kisses the grave of former 
 Serbian leader Slobodan Milosevic during the funeral in his hometown of 
 Pozarevac, some 50 kilometers (30 miles) southeast of Belgrade, Saturday, 
 March 18, 2006. [AP]  | 
The late Serbian 
leader's burial, a week after his death while on U.N. trial charged with 
genocide and crimes against humanity, followed an emotional farewell in Belgrade 
that drew at least 80,000 Serb nationalists and another in his birthplace 
attended by up to 20,000 admirers. 
As a cold drizzle fell, his flag-draped coffin was lowered into a double 
grave with a place for his widow, Mirjana Markovic, who reportedly wants to join 
him when she dies. 
The grave, marked with a simple marble slab inscribed with both of their 
names in Cyrillic letters and the dates 1941-2006, was dug beneath a favorite 
linden tree where the couple first kissed as high school sweethearts. 
No immediate members of Milosevic's family attended. 
But in a letter read at graveside, Markovic, who lives in self-imposed exile 
in Moscow because she faces Serbian charges of abuse of power during her 
husband's 13-year reign, said: "You lost your life while fighting for noble 
causes. You were killed by villains. But I know you will live forever for all 
who wish to live like human beings." 
A letter from the couple's son, Marko Milosevic, expressed hope that the late 
president's death would "sober up the humiliated Serb people." 
"To die for one's country means to live forever," his letter said. 
No priest officiated at the interment because Milosevic was an avowed 
atheist. 
Among the supporters in Pozarevac were several indicted war crimes suspects 
on temporary leave from the U.N. tribunal in The Hague, Netherlands. One, 
retired Gen. Dragoljub Ojdanic, wore his military uniform. 
After the burial, residents of the gritty industrial town 30 miles south of 
the capital waited in a long line to view the grave, which was framed by a 
crimson carpet and brass stands holding red velvet ropes. 
People had lined the town's main street to welcome the arrival of Milosevic's 
remains, cheering and waving as a brass band played a funeral march. Many threw 
red roses, the symbol of the Socialist Party. 
Earlier in Belgrade, Milosevic supporters packed a square in front of the 
federal parliament to pay their respects. Many were bused in by his Socialist 
Party from Serb areas in Bosnia, Croatia and Kosovo. 
People wept and chanted "Slobo! Slobo!" at the sight of the flag-draped 
coffin on a bier atop a red-carpeted stage. Some clutched photographs of 
Milosevic or the U.N. court's two most-wanted fugitives: Bosnian Serb leader 
Radovan Karadzic and his wartime military chief, Gen. Ratko Mladic. 
Serbian authorities refused to approve an official ceremony, but Saturday's 
farewell — organized by the Socialists and technically private — had some of the 
trappings of a state funeral.