Connect with us

NEWS

Selfies, hugs and protests: King Charles’s new approach in spotlight during ‘fast and furious’ royal tour of Australia…. See More

Published

on

Issue of Aboriginal sovereignty front and centre during head of state’s whirlwind first visit

King Charles and Queen Camilla have left Australia after more than 30 official engagements – and a fair share of controversy – packed into just four full days on the ground.

In the stage-managed whirlwind were churchgoers, bushfire scientists, a violinist, authors, dancers, architects, chefs, surf life savers, schoolchildren, republicans and monarchists – and unscripted discordance as activists took up Aboriginal sovereignty directly with the crown.

Senator Lidia Thorpe’s shouts of “this is not your country” to the king in Parliament House on Monday were accompanied by small protests in Sydney and Canberra, including by the Kooma Murri activist Wayne “Coco” Wharton, who attempted on both Monday and Tuesday to deliver a “notice of complicity in Aboriginal Genocide” to the king. He was arrested near the Sydney Opera House on Tuesday afternoon after shouting to people queueing to see the royals that Australia was “a nation of thieves”.

The message was delivered less bluntly by Uncle Allan Murray of the Metropolitan Local Aboriginal Land Council, who told the king when he visited the National Centre for Indigenous Excellence in Redfern on Tuesday: “Welcome to country. We’ve got stories to tell and I think you witnessed that story yesterday in Canberra, but the story is unwavering and we’ve got a long way to achieve what we want to achieve and that’s our own sovereignty.”

It wasn’t only Charles III’s first visit to Australia as king, but his first tour as king. It was unique in another way too, with Charles’s ongoing cancer treatment resulting in a pared-down schedule, taking in just Canberra and Sydney before Samoa.

On Wednesday morning, when the royal visitors lifted off in Sydney, the prime minister, Anthony Albanese, said in a statement that their visit had been “historic”.

“Their majesties met a range of extraordinary Australians who demonstrated the best of our great country,” he said.

Juliet Rieden, a royal commentator and author of The Royals in Australia, said the tour, though “fast and furious”, was long enough to offer a sense of Charles’s stamp on the monarchy.

“Everyone wondered how his reign would be different from the Queen’s. And I think we saw here that the way it’s going to be different is in his relationship with the public,” she said.

That relationship, Rieden said, was “becoming meaningful”.

There was no better moment to illustrate that than when the 71-year-old member of the stolen generations, Uncle James Michael “Widdy” Welsh, told the king he was more of a hugger than a hand-shaker. The king responded: “Hugs are good.”

“So I went in for the hug and he gave me one back,” Welsh told reporters.

Not long ago, that hug would not have happened, Rieden said.

“There might be the odd polite handshake as [the Queen] walked down the line, but none of this deep interaction, listening to people’s stories, none of the touching,” she said.

New to the monarchy, too, was the approval of selfies, with the king posing for photos with groups of schoolchildren outside the opera house. In the New South Wales parliament, politicians openly filmed the king, where, Rieden said, an equerry (royal attendant) would once have asked that phones be put away.

“This was a vision of the modern monarchy, which you wouldn’t expect to see from a 75-year-old.”

The tour was never going to have the youthful glamour of some former royal tours, but, for some, the occasion was momentous.

Among the 10,000 or so people at the opera house on Tuesday were Martin Sweeney, 50, who flew from Melbourne to see the king, and Wendy Soden, 67, who made the trip from Brisbane.

It’s the first visit to Australia by a king … even just a glimpse of the king would be enough,” Sweeney said.

But fans’ faux crowns and union jack-emblazoned jackets were ultimately upstaged by a sneezing alpaca and a crown-wearing dachshund named Captain Bigglesworth.

There were nods to the Queen’s nation-stopping 1954 tour. Queen Camilla wore her late mother-in-law’s famous wattle brooch – given by the Australian government to Elizabeth II – when she landed in Sydney in pouring rain on Friday evening. Queen Camilla will return to London with another brooch, a tiny silver spoon presented to her by the OzHarvest charity founder, Ronni Kahn.

In Samoa, a warm welcome is ready for the king and queen when they land in Apia on Wednesday evening – though there, too, conversations swirl around its colonial past, with the subject of reparations expected to come up

This is what we’re up against
Bad actors spreading disinformation online to fuel intolerance.

Teams of lawyers from the rich and powerful trying to stop us publishing stories they don’t want you to see.

Lobby groups with opaque funding who are determined to undermine facts about the climate emergency and other established science.

Authoritarian states with no regard for the freedom of the press.

***

But we have something powerful on our side.

We’ve got you.

This is why we’re inviting you to access our brilliant, investigative journalism with exclusive digital extras to unlock:

1. Unlimited articles in our app

2. Ad-free reading on all your devices

3. Exclusive newsletter for supporters, sent every week from the Guardian newsroom

4. Far fewer asks for support

5. Full access to the Guardian Feast app

The Guardian is funded by readers like you in Nigeria and the only person who decides what we publish is our editor.

ROYAL FAMILY23 minutes ago

Breaking: King Charles adds heartbreaking detail to royal home ahead of Christmas….See More

CELEBRITY37 minutes ago

Travis Fimmel’s New TV Show With 72% On Rotten Tomatoes Finally Gives Him A Replacement For Ragnar, 4 Years After Vikings Ended….Read More

ROYAL FAMILY1 hour ago

Breaking News: Prince William, Kate Middleton plan ‘special’ Christmas after ‘brutal’ year…. Continue Reading

ROYAL FAMILY1 hour ago

Exclusive: King Charles set to spend time with grandchildren after Meghan Markle disappointed monarch…Read More

ROYAL FAMILY2 hours ago

Breaking News: King Charles takes ‘brutal’ action on Prince Andrew ‘before it’s too late…..See More

CELEBRITY4 hours ago

Breaking News: Diddy smiles and blows kisses to family during court bail hearing….See More

ROYAL FAMILY4 hours ago

Breaking News: King Charles breaks cover after Palace issues major update on Camilla…. Check In

ROYAL FAMILY4 hours ago

Meghan Markle releases statement after solo Thanksgiving appearance amid professional separation from Harry….Read More

ROYAL FAMILY5 hours ago

Robbie Williams reveals death of late Queen caused him to lose ‘millions of dollars….Read More

ROYAL FAMILY5 hours ago

Breaking News: Final years’: Ominous King Charles admission resurfaces….Read More

ROYAL FAMILY5 hours ago

The Royal Family Where So Excited Hearing The Good News Of Queen Camilla’s fresh health….Read More

ROYAL FAMILY5 hours ago

Heartbreaking : Kate Middleton, Prince William land in trouble related to monarchy….Read More

Copyright © 2024 Louvernews