Daily Record

Radio tribute to work of Prince’s Trust

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BY CRAIG SIMPSON A STAR-STUDDED documentar­y will celebrate the charitable work of the Prince of Wales to mark his 70th birthday.

Benedict Cumberbatc­h is among the big names paying tribute to the work of the Prince’s Trust, who have been helping disadvanta­ged young people for 42 years.

BBC Radio 2’s In Youth We Trust will celebrate the founding of the trust in 1976 after Charles’s time in the Royal Navy and their continued work.

The documentar­y will air on the prince’s birthday – November 14 – and will feature interviews with the heir to the throne.

There will also be archive interviews and stories from Charles, and a look at the major charitable events in the trust’s history. BY RUSSELL MYERS MEGHAN Markle got such a buzz out of kids singing about mosquitoes while flapping their arms she couldn’t stop laughing.

The Duchess of Sussex seemed to be trying to suppress her fit of the giggles as she and Prince Harry were serenaded by the boys in Tonga.

Meghan wiped away tears of laughter as the secondary school choir performed flying actions and made buzzing noises.

A source said the aim of the song was to “frighten off any mozzies”.

Harry also looked a little awkward while he chuckled too, but the pair need not have worried if they feared they were meant to be keeping a straight face.

The choir – in smart white uniforms – had broad smiles and revelled in the royals’ warm applause at the end of the light-hearted performanc­e yesterday.

The song had a serious message. Tonga is suffering an outbreak of the zika virus, which is transmitte­d by mosquitoes, and can cause serious birth defects.

Alifeleti Atiola, the principal of the school in the rainforest, revealed mosquito repellent was sprayed for 48 hours ahead of the royal visit. He said it was to reassure the pregnant duchess about the zika threat.

Mr Atiola added: “I knew there was a concern. I just wanted to make sure she knew that it is safe here.” Meghan, 37, did HER ROYAL CRYNESS Meghan wipes tear away as she splits her sides FLAP OF HONOUR Boys perform for royals in Tonga not join Harry, 34, when he trekked into the forest to dedicate two of the school’s rainforest tracts to the Queen’s Commonweal­th Canopy environmen­tal project. The school, Tupou College on the Tongan island of Tongatapu, is said to be the oldest secondary in the Pacific. Due to the zika threat, UK authoritie­s have advised against all but essential travel to Tonga and neighbouri­ng Fiji, where the royal couple have also been during their 16-day tour of the region.

While being shown around a market in Tonga yesterday, Harry and Meghan declined a stallholde­r’s offer of a necklace carved from black coral.

The royals are thought to have said “no” because of environmen­tal concerns – eco groups are against stripping black coral from the ocean.

Later, after the couple returned to Sydney, the duchess dazzled in a £10,000 Oscar de la Renta dress – adorned with laser-cut birds – at the Australian Geographic Society Awards.

The pair handed out prizes at the ceremony. Harry also accepted an award on behalf of the Queen for the QCC campaign to boost forest conservati­on.

Paying tribute to his father, Harry said Prince Charles and others have been “unrelentin­g in their commitment to preserve the most valuable resource we have – our planet”.

 ??  ?? FLIGHT STUFF Meghan in amazing bird gown
FLIGHT STUFF Meghan in amazing bird gown
 ??  ?? BIRTHDAY Prince Charles
BIRTHDAY Prince Charles

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