The Borneo Post

Prince Harry and Meghan to pet koalas on Pacific tour

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LONDON: Prince Harry and Meghan will pet koalas and watch soldiers perform the haka when they tour the Pacific in their fi rst major outing abroad this month, a royal official said on Thursday.

The US actress married the grandson of Queen Elizabeth II in May, becoming the new royal of media obsession in Britain and beyond.

Meghan has only just attended her fi rst solo function, opening an exhibition last month and making media waves in the process by closing her own car door.

The new Duchess of Sussex will now be scrutinise­d for 16 days running as she dashes with the prince across Australia, Fiji, Tonga and New Zealand starting on Oct 16.

“I would think it may be a little daunting,” Sam Cohen, a royal official who helped Meghan prepare for the wedding, said of the 37-year- old’s fi rst big outing.

The couple will be accompanie­d by a staff of 10 and a substantia­lly larger swarm of reporters from all the British papers and TV stations.

Warding off an early potential scandal, Cohen assured reporters that expenses for Meghan’s accompanyi­ng hairdresse­r would be paid “privately” and not by the British public.

The official visit begins in Sydney, where they will be welcomed by Australia’s Governor- General Peter Cosgrove and his wife Lynne.

The royals will meet two koalas that same afternoon, which they will be allowed to pet but not cuddle due to strict new anti-koala cuddling rules, Cohen said.

“You can cuddle in Queensland and pet in New South Wales,” she explained.

After sailing Sydney Harbour and visiting the famous Bondi Beach, attending functions at Prince Harry’s Invictus Games competitio­ns for wounded soldiers and meeting Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison, they jet off to Fiji on Oct 23.

Meghan will get a chance to speak at a UN women’s empowermen­t in marketplac­es event and meet some female vendors in the project in the Fiji capital Suva.

They will meet the local royals in both Fiji and Tonga, which are members of the Commonweal­th.

The fi nal leg coincides with the 125th anniversar­y of women’s suffrage in New Zealand — the fi rst country to give women the right to vote.

Meghan is expected to speak at a suffrage anniversar­y celebratio­n in Wellington on Oct 28.

The couple will have a chance to watch members of the New Zealand defence force perform the haka — the traditiona­l warrior dance popularise­d globally by the nation’s rugby team — at a governor’s reception earlier that afternoon.

The trip officially ends in New Zealand on Oct 31.

Cohen said Meghan has previously visited New Zealand as a tourist in 2014.

Prince Harry has been to all four countries, but on his own.

The couple’s fi rst trip abroad saw them dash off to Dublin shortly after their wedding.

 ?? AFP photos ?? Prince Harry and Meghan made their first joint official visit to Sussex on Wednesday. They toured several of the Pavilion’s rooms, learning more about the building’s history and the impact that it had on the social developmen­t of Brighton in the 18th century. (Right) The royal couple visit the University of Chichester Technology park in Chichester. (Far right) Harry strokes the dog of a well-wisher as he arrives in Chichester—
AFP photos Prince Harry and Meghan made their first joint official visit to Sussex on Wednesday. They toured several of the Pavilion’s rooms, learning more about the building’s history and the impact that it had on the social developmen­t of Brighton in the 18th century. (Right) The royal couple visit the University of Chichester Technology park in Chichester. (Far right) Harry strokes the dog of a well-wisher as he arrives in Chichester—

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