The late Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez has been laid to rest
at a military museum after hundreds of thousands said a final farewell
in a procession through Caracas.
Friends and family joined government and army officials as the coffin arrived at the former army barracks-turned-museum where he plotted his failed 1992 coup.
Official television coverage, streaming the procession throughout the day, cut the footage just as Mr Chavez's coffin, bedecked in a Venezuelan flag, was set to be interred.
The museum housing his body is open to the public and the government anticipates that the mausoleum will become a "place of pilgrimage for the world's revolutionaries".
On Friday, Venezuelan officials ruled out embalming the former leader and leaving his body on permanent public display in a similar fashion to Lenin.
Communications minister Ernesto Villegas wrote on Twitter: "We have ruled out the option of embalming the body of comandante Chavez after a Russian medical commission report."
The procedure would require the body to be sent to Russia and stay there for at least seven months.
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