The Prague Post - Queen Elizabeth's grandchildren mount vigil around coffin

EUR -
AED 4.263454
AFN 77.06993
ALL 96.572408
AMD 443.001505
ANG 2.078099
AOA 1064.558013
ARS 1684.777561
AUD 1.771739
AWG 2.089645
AZN 2.004187
BAM 1.955798
BBD 2.342018
BDT 141.979259
BGN 1.955606
BHD 0.437673
BIF 3427.498304
BMD 1.160914
BND 1.505899
BOB 8.063993
BRL 6.219131
BSD 1.162834
BTN 104.105354
BWP 15.519387
BYN 3.374997
BYR 22753.913284
BZD 2.338598
CAD 1.625169
CDF 2571.424237
CHF 0.934106
CLF 0.027484
CLP 1078.198675
CNY 8.209693
CNH 8.209821
COP 4423.25626
CRC 572.599479
CUC 1.160914
CUP 30.764219
CVE 110.2649
CZK 24.159083
DJF 207.066054
DKK 7.468136
DOP 72.649934
DZD 151.236697
EGP 55.22514
ERN 17.413709
ETB 181.589581
FJD 2.636088
FKP 0.876949
GBP 0.878562
GEL 3.128627
GGP 0.876949
GHS 13.173988
GIP 0.876949
GMD 84.747152
GNF 10102.990802
GTQ 8.91203
GYD 243.269779
HKD 9.039863
HNL 30.619368
HRK 7.533869
HTG 152.059862
HUF 380.951006
IDR 19297.292018
ILS 3.79027
IMP 0.876949
INR 104.338653
IQD 1523.298613
IRR 48903.499722
ISK 148.005296
JEP 0.876949
JMD 186.525454
JOD 0.823106
JPY 180.775237
KES 150.141688
KGS 101.522127
KHR 4645.99577
KMF 492.227135
KPW 1044.822404
KRW 1705.115876
KWD 0.356471
KYD 0.968999
KZT 594.299459
LAK 25227.868376
LBP 104133.205192
LKR 358.789673
LRD 210.460715
LSL 19.862596
LTL 3.427877
LVL 0.702225
LYD 6.337185
MAD 10.75249
MDL 19.726897
MGA 5195.129521
MKD 61.634944
MMK 2437.708348
MNT 4128.760824
MOP 9.328392
MRU 46.243958
MUR 53.564486
MVR 17.890003
MWK 2016.35027
MXN 21.257054
MYR 4.799248
MZN 74.174808
NAD 19.862682
NGN 1680.95714
NIO 42.789961
NOK 11.760656
NPR 166.567848
NZD 2.027002
OMR 0.446368
PAB 1.162799
PEN 3.90928
PGK 4.996995
PHP 67.899566
PKR 328.524791
PLN 4.230811
PYG 8128.062614
QAR 4.250214
RON 5.088868
RSD 117.373332
RUB 90.237461
RWF 1691.942182
SAR 4.356815
SBD 9.547151
SCR 16.798044
SDG 698.273242
SEK 10.97423
SGD 1.50582
SHP 0.870986
SLE 26.643345
SLL 24343.782769
SOS 663.419397
SRD 44.735234
STD 24028.574745
STN 24.499978
SVC 10.173991
SYP 12837.892674
SZL 19.870495
THB 37.126606
TJS 10.738336
TMT 4.063199
TND 3.427012
TOP 2.795202
TRY 49.302736
TTD 7.881993
TWD 36.511847
TZS 2863.993297
UAH 49.262728
UGX 4185.996189
USD 1.160914
UYU 46.250157
UZS 13884.927557
VES 286.735493
VND 30626.070731
VUV 141.440132
WST 3.256392
XAF 655.973354
XAG 0.020201
XAU 0.000275
XCD 3.137428
XCG 2.095598
XDR 0.81582
XOF 655.97618
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.7038
ZAR 19.850537
ZMK 10449.616415
ZMW 26.657205
ZWL 373.813816
  • RBGPF

    1.2200

    79

    +1.54%

  • CMSC

    -0.0900

    23.32

    -0.39%

  • NGG

    -0.4600

    75.65

    -0.61%

  • SCS

    0.0900

    16.38

    +0.55%

  • RYCEF

    -0.3700

    13.83

    -2.68%

  • GSK

    -0.6700

    47.19

    -1.42%

  • AZN

    -2.2100

    90.52

    -2.44%

  • RELX

    -0.4900

    39.72

    -1.23%

  • BTI

    -0.5300

    58.13

    -0.91%

  • RIO

    0.0200

    71.97

    +0.03%

  • BP

    0.4100

    36.51

    +1.12%

  • CMSD

    -0.0300

    23.29

    -0.13%

  • BCE

    -0.0200

    23.49

    -0.09%

  • BCC

    -0.8900

    75.13

    -1.18%

  • VOD

    -0.3400

    12.13

    -2.8%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    13.78

    -0.15%

Queen Elizabeth's grandchildren mount vigil around coffin
Queen Elizabeth's grandchildren mount vigil around coffin / Photo: Ian Vogler - POOL/AFP

Queen Elizabeth's grandchildren mount vigil around coffin

Queen Elizabeth II's eight grandchildren mounted a vigil around her coffin on Saturday, hours after King Charles III and his heir Prince William staged an unscheduled London walkabout to thank those queueing overnight to pay their last respects.

Text size:

William and his estranged brother Prince Harry led the 15-minute vigil inside parliament's Westminster Hall, which has hosted tens of thousands of mourners since the late queen began lying in state there on Wednesday.

The grandchildren, aged from 44 to 14, stood silently with their eyes lowered as members of the public filed past.

Harry -- who served two tours with the British Army in Afghanistan -- wore his military uniform, despite no longer being a working royal, after being given special permission by his father.

The move appeared to be the latest olive branch offered by King Charles towards his youngest son after Harry and his wife Meghan, now living in California, accused the royal family of racism.

An impromptu walkabout by the king and his eldest son William earlier delighted mourners who had queued all night to see Queen Elizabeth's coffin before Monday's grand state funeral.

Cries of "God save the king" came from the riverside crowd as the royals thanked the well-wishers waiting patiently in line, before Charles went on to meet some of the many world leaders arriving for Monday's lavish send-off.

"I'm so happy. He was so calm, and friendly and he was so gentle," said Geraldine Potts-Ahmad, a secretary in her late 50s, as she struggled to contain her emotions after shaking hands with King Charles.

"He is going to make the best king. That gentleness and that tenderness -- I saw the queen in that."

Queen Elizabeth's death on September 8 aged 96, after a record-breaking 70 years on the throne, has sparked an outpouring of emotion.

Tens of thousands of people are braving waits that have stretched to more than 25 hours to view her coffin.

Volunteers handed out blue blankets to guard against the night-time chill.

- Fainting -

The sombre occasion was briefly disrupted late on Friday when a man burst out of the line and approached the coffin, which sits topped with the Imperial State Crown.

 

Some 435 people in the queue have needed medical treatment, often for head injuries after fainting, the London Ambulance Service said.

But Alison Whitham, an ex-nurse from Ashby in the English Midlands, said her 14-hour wait was well worth it after paying her final respects.

"It was very moving, very dignified, blissfully quiet," the 54-year-old said.

"The fact that you could just concentrate, with nobody holding phones up, was so lovely."

Police are mounting Britain's biggest-ever security operation for Monday's funeral, with hundreds of dignitaries including US President Joe Biden set to jet in and mourners already setting up camp in front of Westminster Hall and Buckingham Palace for the final goodbye.

"I went to princess Diana's funeral when I was a teenager, I was right outside the abbey, and the atmosphere was incredible," said Magdalena Staples, 38, who was camping outside Westminster Hall with her two children, aged nine and 10.

"I wanted my children... to have the same experience. We're camping for three nights, we've got hot clothes, snacks, a mattress and toilets nearby," she added.

Less than two weeks since she was appointed by the late queen, British Prime Minister Liz Truss was on Saturday beginning a packed series of meetings with world leaders including New Zealand counterpart Jacinda Ardern and Australia's pro-republic PM Anthony Albanese.

Ardern, Albanese and Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau were among leaders who paid their own respects at Westminster Hall.

They later held one-on-one talks with their new king as he received leaders of the Commonwealth realms -- the 14 countries over which he now reigns in addition to the United Kingdom -- at Buckingham Palace.

From Australia and Canada to Jamaica and Papua New Guinea, they have formally proclaimed him their new sovereign.

But republican movements are gaining ground in many of the countries, and efforts to keep them all in the royal fold will likely be a feature of his reign.

Biden was expected to visit Westminster Hall on Sunday.

- 'Tide of emotion' -

After visiting Wales on Friday, Charles joined a 15-minute vigil with his siblings -- Princess Anne, Prince Andrew and Prince Edward -- around their mother's casket.

The personal sorrow of the queen's family has been playing out in the glare of intense international attention.

Her granddaughters Princesses Beatrice and Eugenie, who were part of Saturday's vigil, paid a heartfelt tribute to "our dearest Grannie".

"We, like many, thought you'd be here forever," the sisters said. "And we all miss you terribly.

"You were our matriarch, our guide, our loving hand on our backs leading us through this world. For now dear Grannie, all we want to say is thank you," they added.

The public have until 6:30 am (0530 GMT) on Monday to view the coffin before the queen is honoured with Britain's first state funeral in nearly six decades.

 

It will be attended by more than 2,000 guests, but leaders from countries at loggerheads with the UK such as Russia, Belarus and Afghanistan have not been invited.

China's vice president Wang Qishan will attend, Beijing's foreign ministry confirmed, after a diplomatic spat saw Chinese officials barred from visiting the coffin inside parliament.

P.Benes--TPP