Thousands of Sudanese came out on Friday in the city of Omdurman for the funeral of the country's last elected prime minister and prominent political party leader Sadiq Al Mahdi, who died of Covid-19. Al Mahdi's body arrived earlier in the day from the United Arab Emirates, where he had been flown to receive medical treatment in Abu Dhabi after testing positive for coronavirus in early November. Al Mahdi, who was the leader of the National Ummah Party, died on Thursday at age 84. Sudan has recorded more than 16,000 coronavirus cases, including 1,215 deaths. Statesmen and military leaders, including the president of Sudan's ruling Sovereign Council, Gen Abdel Fattah Al Burhan, and Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok, waited at Khartoum International Airport for the plane carrying Al Mahdi's body. Dozens of military officers carried the casket draped with the Sudanese flag out of the airport in a formal military procession. Thousands of mourners, mostly men in white robes and turbans wearing protective masks, lined up outside the Al Mahdi family cemetery in Khartoum's twin city of Omdurman. Besides his family and supporters, attendees included members of Al Mahdi's political party and followers of the Sufi religious order he led for decades. Al Mahdi was the great-grandson of Mohammad Ahmad Al Mahdi, a religious leader whose movement waged a successful war against Egyptian-Ottoman rule in Sudan in the second half of the 19th century. He studied philosophy, politics and economics at Oxford University. He was both a politician and a theologian and authored several books on Islamic law, democracy and Sudanese politics. Al Mahdi served as prime minister from 1986 to 1989 before being overthrown by the military coup that brought longtime dictator Omar Al Bashir to power. He also served as prime minister from 1966 to 1967. Sudan's transitional government announced three days of national mourning following Al Mahdi's passing. Sudan has been ruled by a civilian-military transitional government since last year, following a popular uprising that forced the military to overthrow Al Bashir.