South Africa's President Jacob Zuma has not attended the funeral of veteran anti-apartheid activist Ahmed Kathrada at the request of his family.
Mr Kathrada called on Mr Zuma to resign last year after he became mired in a series of corruption scandals.
Ex-President Kgalema Motlanthe got a rousing applause from mourners when he repeated Mr Kathrada's call.
Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan, who is at risk of being sacked by Mr Zuma, also received a standing ovation.
Mr Kathrada, 87, was buried in the main city, Johannesburg, following his death on Tuesday.
He was jailed alongside Nelson Mandela for fighting against white minority rule.
Mr Kathrada spent more than 26 years in prison before his release in 1989. He later served as an adviser to then-President Mandela in South Africa's first democratically elected government.
Mr Zuma had ordered the national flag to fly at half-mast following his death and had postponed a cabinet meeting so that officials could attend the funeral.
However, Mr Zuma did not attend he funeral and would not attend a memorial service later this week "in compliance with the wishes of the family," a government statement said.
Mr Kathrada's wife, Barbara Hogan, is known to be a fierce critic of Mr Zuma.
Mr Kathrada wrote to Mr Zuma last year, asking him to resign after South Africa's highest court ruled that he had breached the constitution by failing to repay government money used to upgrade his private rural home in Nkandla.
In a separate case, another court ruled that Mr Zuma should be charged with corruption over a 1999 arms deal.
He denies any wrongdoing, and has refused to resign.
Milton Nkosi, BBC News, Johannesburg: Why has Zuma been snubbed?
The request to Mr Zuma not to attend the the funeral suggests that family and friends of the anti-apartheid veteran want to distance themselves from the scandal-hit president.
Mr Zuma's allies - especially youth leader Collen Maine - launched a sustained attack on veterans like Mr Katharada, after they raised concern about his leadership and the corruption in government.
South Africa's former high commissioner to the UK, Cheryl Carolus, told me: "It's just a shame to imagine that in the last few years, even weeks and months, he [Mr Kathrada] was subjected to the most outrageous vitriol from kids who weren't even born when he went to jail - and that other elders in our ranks actually allowed that".
So the absence of the 74-year-old Mr Zuma - who spent about a decade on the notorious Robben Island prison with Mr Kathrada - from the funeral can only be described as a snub.
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Mr Motlanthe, the keynote speaker at the funeral, said that "on a day like this we should not mince our words".
To cheers from mourners, he read excepts of Mr Kathrada's letter and said that the anti-apartheid veteran was "deeply disturbed by the current failure of post-apartheid politics".
"Today, we close his eyes permanently. During his life, he opened ours forever," Mr Motlanthe said.
Mr Gordhan shed a tear when Neeshan Balton, the executive director of the Ahmed Kathrada Foundation, paid tribute to him.
Mr Gordhan stood for the values of Mr Kathrada, Mr Balton said.
South Africa's media has been rife with speculation that Mr Zuma plans to sack Mr Gordhan in a move aimed at giving him and his allies greater control over government finances.
On Monday, Mr Zuma ordered him to cut short a trip to the UK, where he was meeting leading businessmen in an attempt to persuade them to invest in South Africa.
Why was Kathrada jailed?
He was arrested in 1963, along with several others, at a farm in the Johannesburg suburb of Rivonia. They had been meeting there in secret to plan the armed struggle against the apartheid government.
The following year Mr Kathrada was found guilty of conspiring to commit acts of violence. Seven other defendants, including Mr Mandela, were also convicted of conspiracy and three other charges.
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