Bangkok Post

Queen talks about ‘quite bumpy’ 2019

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LONDON: Queen Elizabeth will stress the value of harmony and reconcilia­tion in her Christmas message this year, Buckingham Palace said yesterday, after a “quite bumpy” year for her own family and for Britain as it struggled with Brexit.

The palace released two short extracts from the 93-year-old monarch’s televised Christmas Day message, including one on the life of Jesus and the importance of reconcilia­tion.

There was no indication of whether the queen will mention more painful aspects of 2019 for the royal family, particular­ly the furore over her son Prince Andrew’s links to US financier Jeffrey Epstein.

Prince Andrew has denied allegation­s by a woman who said she was trafficked by Epstein and forced to have sex with his friends, including the prince, when she was 17.

Along with her 98-year-old husband, the Duke of Edinburgh, being involved in a car crash in January and spending the run-up to Christmas in hospital for checks, and her grandsons Princes William and Harry publicly falling out, it has been what many commentato­rs have called another “annus horribilis” for her.

That was how she described 1992, when three of her children’s marriages — including that of Prince Charles to Princess Diana — collapsed and a fire severely damaged her Windsor Castle home.

On reconcilia­tion, the queen talks in the excerpts of “how small steps taken in faith and in hope can overcome long-held difference­s and deep-seated divisions to bring harmony and understand­ing ...”

She adds: “The path, of course, is not always smooth, and may at times this year have felt quite bumpy, but small steps can make a world of difference.”

Britain’s regional and political divisions have been exacerbate­d since it voted to leave the EU.

A landslide election win for Conservati­ve Prime Minister Boris Johnson this month enabled him finally to win approval for his Brexit deal in parliament, but also re-awakened calls north of the border for another referendum on Scottish independen­ce.

Newspapers pored over details in the excerpts of the queen’s message and the Times noted that family photograph­s on her desk seemed to focus attention on the line of succession. The Daily Mirror noted there was no picture of Prince Andrew either.

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