the king receives military honors on the first day of his trip to Australia

the king receives military honors on the first day of his trip to Australia
the king receives military honors on the first day of his trip to Australia

The British monarch received military honors this Saturday, October 19 from each corps of the Australian forces, a prestigious welcome to launch his nine-day visit to Australia and the Samoa Islands.

King Charles III can now boast of being Marshal of the Australian Army, Marshal of his Air Force and Admiral of the Fleet. After a journey of more than 20 hours, the British monarch landed this Friday at the end of the day in Sydney, with his wife Queen Camilla for his first long trip since the announcement of his cancer.

Arriving in the rain, Charles and Camilla were greeted by local dignitaries and bouquet-bearing children before a quick private meeting with Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and his fiancée. The sovereign was also appointed Admiral of the Navy, Marshal of the Army and Marshal of the Air Force of Australia by the country’s chief of defense.

This nine-day trip to Australia and the Samoa Islands aims to strengthen the prestige of the British monarchy among an uninterested Australian public. Opportunities to meet the public are planned with an event in front of the Sydney Opera House and a giant barbecue.

Charles III back in business, eight months after announcing his cancer

A less luxurious and busy tour than usual, due to the state of health of the sovereign. A stop in New Zealand has been canceled, and there will be only six days in Sydney and Canberra before attending a Commonwealth summit in Samoa.

A third of Australians want to get rid of the monarchy

But with the exception of a handful of staunch monarchists and ardent republicans, the Australian public was largely indifferent to Charles’s visit.

A recent poll found that around a third of Australians would like to get rid of the monarchy. A third would keep it and a third are mixed. Support for the monarchy appears to have plunged since the last royal visit in 2011, when thousands of people flocked to greet Queen Elizabeth II.

“I think most people see him as a good king,” says Clare Cory, a 62-year-old Sydney lawyer who is divided on the British monarchy.

“Most of my ancestors came from England, I think we owe that country something,” she continues, before adding that Australia now looks more towards the Asia-Pacific region than one place “ on the other side of the world.

Some are more critical, seeing no reason to retain a king whose accent, dress and customs have little in common with the inhabitants of the Antipodes.

“He just gives the impression of an old white man,” said Maree Parker, a homeschooler. “We don’t need a king and a queen.”

Charles’ first visit in 1966

Still, Australia holds many happy memories for Charles, and he can be sure to find supportive people there.

When he was Prince of Wales, he first visited Australia in 1966, aged 17, to study at Timbertop, a remote boarding school in the mountains of the southern state of Victoria. is from the country. Recalling this period, Charles felt it was “by far the best part” of his education.

And everyone also remembers a photo that has become cult: Charles, 30 years old and still single, shirtless on a beach in Western Australia in 1979, intercepted by an Australian model in a bikini who kissed him on the plays.

-

-

PREV Israel: drone launched from Lebanon towards Benjamin Netanyahu’s private residence
NEXT the Lebrun brothers in the quarter-finals of Europe, follow the match live