Princess Kate, who has completed her chemotherapy, will be present this weekend in London for military commemorations, alongside King Charles III, still being treated for cancer, Buckingham Palace announced on Friday.
• Also read: Kate and William’s first official public visit since finishing chemotherapy
• Also read: Princess Kate Returns to Activities After Ending Chemotherapy
• Also read: Princess Kate has completed her chemotherapy treatment
The King and Princess of Wales, who resumed public engagements in September, will participate in a festival at the Royal Albert Hall on Saturday, then on Sunday in a ceremony at the Cenotaph, the official British war memorial.
The participation of Queen Camilla, who suffers from a lung infection, will be “subject to further medical advice”, the palace also indicated in its press release.
The doctors of the wife of Charles III, aged 77, “advised her a short period of rest”, Buckingham said on Tuesday. She then said “hope to be recovered in time to attend” these ceremonies commemorating the wars and paying tribute to the killed Commonwealth soldiers.
Extremely popular in the United Kingdom, she revealed in March 2024 that she had cancer, without specifying its nature, two months after “abdominal surgery”.
In September, the 42-year-old princess announced the end of her chemotherapy.
For her first joint official visit with her husband, Prince William, she went to Southport (England) in October, to the scene of an attack which sparked riots this summer.
She had previously appeared in public on June 15 for the birthday parade of King Charles, on the balcony of Buckingham Palace, then at the Wimbledon final, at the beginning of July, where she presented the trophy to the winner of the tennis tournament, the Spaniard Carlos Alcaraz.
King Charles III, who will soon celebrate his 76th birthday, also announced at the start of the year that he was suffering from cancer, the nature of which has not been revealed.
He resumed public activities in April after being on hiatus for about two months, and Buckingham Palace announced in late October that it would resume a “normal” pace of foreign travel next year.