The mourners had gathered in the small village of Vero, a half-hour drive from Ajaccio, the capital of the picture-postcard Mediterranean island of Corsica.
In their midst was former nationalist leader Alain Orsoni, 71, who had flown in from exile in Nicaragua to bury his mother. Suddenly, with the ceremony under way, a single shot was fired from nearby scrubland, killing Orsoni instantly.
Thirty-five people have been fatally shot on this island of 350,000 people in the past three years alone, giving it one of France's highest murder rates. Corsicans have become wearily familiar with vendettas and tit-for-tat underworld shootings, but even here, the way Orsoni was killed has stunned islanders.
Yesterday, Alain Orsoni was cremated after a funeral service in Ajaccio. There was a large police presence.
Close friend Jo Peraldi finds it hard to believe that a day of high emotion surrounding the funeral of Orsoni's mother could have been defiled in such a way.
A cemetery is sacred in Corsica, just like a church. Never have I witnessed seeing someone murdered while accompanying their mother to their final resting place, he told Corsican radio.
But for a cousin of the victim, Christian Leca, Orsoni's killing was a tipping point in the horror. People don't kill in cemeteries, it's intolerable, he told Le Monde newspaper.
Judges in Paris specialised in tackling organised crime are running the investigation into Orsoni's shooting alongside the regional prosecutor's office in Marseille. This murder increases the mafia pressure that weighs heavily on Corsican society, says Gilles Simeoni, president of Corsica's regional authority.
The killing of Orsoni marks a grim entry in Corsica's long history of violence. As Corsican nationalism fades, a concerning rise in organized crime has taken its place, with clans acting on opportunism rather than loyalty. This recent tragedy may exacerbate the cycle of revenge killings, further deepening the crisis for the island's residents.






















