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African leaders mourn Zambia's founding president Kenneth Kaunda

FILE PHOTO: Former President of Zambia Kenneth Kaunda speaks during the funeral ceremony for former South African President Nelson Mandela in Qunu

LUSAKA (Reuters) - African leaders and diplomats on Friday joined Zambia in mourning its founding president and liberation hero Kenneth Kaunda, who died last month aged 97 after a bout of pneumonia.

"KK", as he was affectionately known, ruled over Zambia from 1964, when the southern African nation won its independence from Britain, until losing an election in 1991. He died on June 17 in a military hospital in Lusaka.

Kaunda's casket draped in the green, orange, black and red national flag was driven into the main arena of the Lusaka show ground on a gun carriage by an army jeep.

His son, Panji, wept, as did Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta. Other mourners waved white handkerchiefs, one of the most prominent idiosyncrasies of Kaunda, who after leaving office became a committed activist against HIV/AIDS.

Although Zambia's copper-based economy did badly under his rule, Kaunda will be remembered more as a staunch African nationalist who stood up to white minority-ruled South Africa.

"We will never be able to pay back the debt that we owe you," South African President Cyril Ramaphosa said, while Zambia's President Edgar Lungu lauded Kaunda's record as an anti-imperialist who "believed that ... Africans deserved to decide our own destiny as a people and that we could not be discriminated against".

Also present were the presidents of Malawi, Namibia, Mozambique, Ghana, Zimbabwe, Botswana, the prime minister of Lesotho, Britain's Minister of African Affairs and Commonwealth Secretary-General Patricia Scotland.

"He was a warrior who defeated the Goliath of oppression," said Scotland.

Kaunda was given full military honours, including a 21-gun salute and an airforce jet display.

In a message, Britain's Queen Elizabeth said Kaunda's "maintaining Zambia as a bastion against apartheid has earned him a place in history".

(Reporting by Chris Mfula; Editing by Tim Cocks and Janet Lawrence)