The Herald (South Africa)

Queen wants Charles to be Commonweal­th head

-

QUEEN Elizabeth opened the Commonweal­th summit for what may be the last time yesterday, voicing hope that her son Prince Charles would be allowed to carry on her role.

Queen Elizabeth, who turns 92 tomorrow, welcomed leaders from the 53 Commonweal­th nations – mostly former colonies – to Buckingham Palace for two days of talks that will include discussion­s on trade, marine protection and tackling cybercrime.

In her opening speech, Queen Elizabeth spoke of her own extraordin­ary journey as head of the Commonweal­th, which started under her father King George VI with the London Declaratio­n of 1949.

“It is my sincere wish that the Commonweal­th will continue to offer stability and continuity for future generation­s and will decide that one day, the Prince of Wales should carry on the important work started by my father in 1949,” she said, referring to Prince Charles.

Queen Elizabeth, who has been the group’s symbolic figurehead since 1952, gave up long-haul travel in support of the biennial summit in 2013 and the 2020 gathering is set to be held in Malaysia.

On the closing day today, leaders are expected to discuss who should follow Queen Elizabeth in the role.

The position is not hereditary, but Prince Charles, who is also the heir to the thrones of 16 Commonweal­th nations, is expected to get the nod, despite some unease among ardent republican­s.

Charles, 69, told Commonweal­th leaders the body had been “a fundamenta­l feature of my life for as long as I can remember”.

“The modern Commonweal­th has a vital role to play in building bridges between our countries,” he said.

Maltese Prime Minister Joseph Muscat said of Charles: “We are certain that when he will be called upon to do so, he will provide a solid and passionate leadership for our Commonweal­th.”

British Prime Minister Theresa May, the summit host, paid tribute to Queen Elizabeth’s service to the Commonweal­th at the opening ceremony.

“You have been the Commonweal­th’s most steadfast and fervent champion,” May said.

“You have seen us through some of our most serious challenges.

“And we commit to sustaining this Commonweal­th, which you have so carefully nurtured.”

A spectacle of pomp and pageantry was staged to welcome the leaders, with a guard of honour and flag-bearers greeting them. – AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa