King Charles to Acknowledge “Painful” Past in State Visit to Kenya

King Charles

King Charles III in Aberdeenshire, Scotland, Britain. September 29, 2023. Photo: Jane Barlow/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo

Britain’s King Charles and his wife Camilla will travel to Kenya for a four-day state visit at the end of this month where he will acknowledge “painful aspects” of its colonial past, Buckingham Palace said on Wednesday.

It will be the third foreign trip by the royals since Charles became King following the death of his mother Queen Elizabeth in September last year, and their first to a nation in the Commonwealth, the voluntary association which he also heads.

The destination is particularly symbolic for Charles as his late mother was in Kenya on a royal tour with her husband Prince Philip in 1952 when she became Queen on the death of her father King George VI. It also comes as the east African nation celebrates 60 years of independence from Britain.

However, logistics mean Charles will be unable to visit the Treetops Hotel where his mother was staying when her husband broke the news to her that she was now the monarch.

Queen Elizabeth II and the Duke of Edinburgh with guard/guide Dick Prickett, sporting a gun and war medals, at the site of the original Treetops hotel with the new one on stilts in the background. This was the Queen’s first visit to the East African country since 1952. Kenya, Nov. 10, 1983.  Photo: PA Images via Getty Images

 

During the trip, which will run from Oct. 31 to Nov. 3, Charles will hold a meeting with President William Ruto, attend a state banquet and hear about how the two nations are working together on issues such as defence and climate change, Chris Fitzgerald, the king’s deputy private secretary, told reporters.

But it will also touch on the former British colony’s past, a sensitive issue after Britain expressed regret and paid out compensation a decade ago for the abuse and torture suffered during the bloody Mau Mau insurgency, the so-called Kenyan Emergency of 1952-1961, in which thousands of Kenyans died.

“His majesty will take time during the visit to deepen his understanding of the wrongs suffered in this period by the people of Kenya,” Fitzgerald said.

The Kenyan visit, Charles’ fourth official visit to the African nation, comes after the royal couple travelled to Germany in March and France last month, with both tours regarded as highly successful diplomatic trips.

“They promote the U.K. to the world and they create lasting legacies and they open up doors and conversations that we might not be able to have,” said a senior foreign office official, speaking on condition of anonymity.

“The U.K. is committed to ensuring Kenya sees the UK as a partner of choice on peace, on trade, on economic development, and much more … Their Majesties and his majesty in particular are able to get together government, private sector and civil society, as no other person can do.”


(Reporting by Michael Holden, additional reporting by Sachin Ravikumar; editing by William James and Christina Fincher)

 

King Charles Took a Moment to Comment on Barbaric Acts in Israel

 

King Charles is appalled by the “barbaric acts of terrorism” in Israel, a Buckingham Palace spokesperson said on Wednesday, following attacks by the Palestinian militant group Hamas.

“This is a situation His Majesty is extremely concerned about, and he has asked to be kept actively updated,” the spokesperson said. “His thoughts and prayers are with all of those suffering, particularly those who have lost loved ones, but also those actively involved as we speak.”

Israel’s death toll has reached 1,200 with more than 2,700 wounded, its military has said, during the Hamas militants’ hours-long rampage after breaching the border fence around Gaza on Saturday.

“His majesty is appalled by and condemns the barbaric acts of terrorism in Israel,” the palace spokesperson said.

(Reporting by Michael Holden; editing by William James)

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