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Mexico and Colombia set for Gabriel Garcia Marquez memorials Mexico and Colombia hold Gabriel Garcia Marquez memorials
(about 4 hours later)
Mexico and Colombia are preparing to hold memorials to author Gabriel Garcia Marquez, who died on Thursday. Mexico and Colombia are holding public memorials to Nobel prize-winning author Gabriel Garcia Marquez, who died on Thursday in Mexico City aged 87.
The presidents of Colombia and Mexico will attend a formal ceremony with funeral cortege in Mexico City, where Garcia Marquez lived for decades. The presidents of Colombia and Mexico are due to attend a formal ceremony with funeral cortege in Mexico City, where Garcia Marquez lived for decades.
At the same time residents in his home town of Aracataca in Colombia will hold a "symbolic burial". At the same time residents in his home town of Aracataca in northern Colombia will hold a symbolic funeral.
The Nobel Prize winner, hailed as one of the greatest writers in Spanish, died at the age of 87. He was considered the finest writer of the Spanish language since Cervantes.
He has already been cremated at a private family ceremony. Garcia Marquez was cremated at a private family ceremony in Mexico City last week.
In Mexico City, a funeral cortege will travel from Garcia Marquez's house and make its way to the Palacio de Bellas Artes for a memorial ceremony. A funeral cortege is taking Garcia Marquez's ashes from his house to the historic centre of the Mexican capital for the memorial ceremony.
Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos and his Mexican counterpart Enrique Pena Nieto will take part in the memorial. The event in the majestic Palace of Fine Arts will be attended by Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos, his Mexican counterpart Enrique Pena Nieto and the author's wife, Mercedes Barcha, and sons, Rodrigo and Gonzalo.
In Colombia, locals are holding a ceremony of their own in his birth place of Aracataca, the inspiration for Macondo, the setting for his seminal novel One Hundred Years of Solitude. Thousands of members of the public who are mourning his loss will also say goodbye to the author at the cultural venue, which is where Mexico pays tribute to its late artistic icons.
It has been adorned with yellow flowers, the author's favourite, and a string quartet will perform music by the Hungarian Bela Bartok, among other composers.
Colombian tributes
In Colombia, residents are holding a ceremony of their own in his birth place of Aracataca, the inspiration for Macondo, the setting for his 1967 seminal masterpiece One Hundred Years of Solitude, which sold millions of copies around the world.
On Tuesday, the Colombian government will hold a formal ceremony at the main cathedral in the capital Bogota, which will be televised.On Tuesday, the Colombian government will hold a formal ceremony at the main cathedral in the capital Bogota, which will be televised.
Then on Wednesday, Colombians will have readings of Garcia Marquez's novel No One Writes to the Colonel in hundreds of libraries, parks and universities across the country.
The BBC's Will Grant in Mexico City says while no-one has said so officially, there may be an element of disappointment in Colombia that the first main event to commemorate Garcia Marquez is taking place in Mexico rather than his country of origin.The BBC's Will Grant in Mexico City says while no-one has said so officially, there may be an element of disappointment in Colombia that the first main event to commemorate Garcia Marquez is taking place in Mexico rather than his country of origin.
But rather than a diplomatic spat, it simply reflects the degree to which both countries - indeed all Latin Americans - considered him to be their own, he says.But rather than a diplomatic spat, it simply reflects the degree to which both countries - indeed all Latin Americans - considered him to be their own, he says.
The writer fled Colombia in 1981 after learning that Colombia's military wanted to question him over links with left-wing guerrillas. One solution being posited is that the writer's ashes be divided between Mexico and Colombia, but his family has not yet revealed its wishes.
The writer fled Colombia in 1981 after learning that the country's military wanted to question him over links to left-wing guerrillas.
Fellow writers, politicians and cultural figures from around the world paid tribute to the author, often credited with inventing the magical-realist genre of fiction.Fellow writers, politicians and cultural figures from around the world paid tribute to the author, often credited with inventing the magical-realist genre of fiction.