Coronation Weekend | King Charles III thanks the British




(Londres) Le roi Charles III a remercié les Britanniques lundi en affirmant que leur soutien était « le plus beau cadeau de couronnement », alors que les festivités touchent à leur fin après trois jours de célébrations.



« Savoir que nous bénéficions de votre soutien et de vos encouragements, et être témoins de votre gentillesse exprimée de tant de manières différentes, a été le plus beau cadeau que nous ayons reçu lors du couronnement », a indiqué le roi dans un message écrit dans lequel il promet de « consacrer [sa] life in the service of the people of the United Kingdom, the realms and the Commonwealth”.

After two days of celebrations, first very solemn on Saturday with the coronation at Westminster Abbey then more festive on Sunday with thousands of neighborhood lunches and a big concert, Monday – a public holiday for the occasion – was placed under the sign of volunteering.

Hundreds of thousands of volunteer assignments were to be filled with the more than 1,500 associations participating in this “Big Help Out”. Charles’ grandchildren – George, Charlotte and Louis – have been a photographer’s delight by helping scouts in Slough, west London.

  • Prince George helping scouts in Slough, west London

    PHOTO DANIEL LEAL, FRANCE-PRESSE AGENCY

    Prince George helping scouts in Slough, west London

  • Prince William and Prince Louis

    PHOTO DANIEL LEAL, ASSOCIATED PRESS

    Prince William and Prince Louis

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Police ‘regrets’

Eight months after his accession to the throne on the death of his mother Elizabeth II, Charles III, 74, was crowned at Westminster Abbey in front of 2,300 guests according to a millennial Anglican rite. His wife Camilla, 75, was also blessed and crowned.





While it was the first coronation in 70 years, Charles remains less popular than his mother and more than 70% of Britons had no intention of attending any kind of celebration this weekend, according to a recent poll. The coronation was also much less followed on television than during the funeral of Elizabeth II in September.

On Saturday, anti-monarchy demonstrators – increasingly audible even if they remain a minority in the United Kingdom – demonstrated in London as the carriages passed, as well as in Scotland and Wales.

Six officials of the anti-monarchy group Republic, including its leader Graham Smith, were arrested before the protest even started, drawing heavy criticism. They were released late Saturday.

On Monday, the London police returned at length to these arrests, explaining that they had taken place because the six people were “suspected of being equipped to chain themselves”.

Under a law that came into effect on Wednesday, criticized as far as the UN, police can arrest people in possession of equipment that could be used to chain themselves on public roads, a technique used by climate activists .

The London police add, however, that the investigation could not prove such an intention, and assures that there will be no prosecution.

Graham Smith tweeted that three police officers came to his home on Monday night and issued an apology, which he did not accept.


PHOTO KIN CHEUNG, ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVES

The leader of the anti-monarchy group Republic, Graham Smith

Earlier in the day he had criticized the new Public Order Act, which he said was introduced “to give them the power to arrest us on any frivolous pretext”.

“We no longer have the right to demonstrate in this country, we only have the freedom to demonstrate with the authorization of the police and politicians,” he told the BBC.

In total, London police made 64 arrests on the day of the King’s coronation, including environmental activists


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