The Daily Telegraph

Prince of Wales to attend as Barbados becomes a republic

- By Hannah Furness ROYAL CORRESPOND­ENT

THE Prince of Wales will visit Barbados to watch it officially become a republic, after its people voted to remove the Queen as head of state and “fully leave our colonial past behind”.

The Prince, invited in his role as future head of the Commonweal­th, will be the “guest of honour” at the Republic Celebratio­n events later this month: the first of their kind in a generation.

He will mark Barbados’s transition to a republic within the Commonweal­th, Clarence House said, as he demonstrat­es the Royal family’s continued loyalty and appreciati­on of the country as it remains in the “family of nations”.

On Nov 30, Dame Sandra Mason, the island’s governor-general, will be sworn in as the new head of state, replacing the Queen. She was elected almost unanimousl­y by its parliament, and will begin her new role as president on the 55th anniversar­y of the country’s independen­ce from Britain in 1966.

The Prince is attending on the personal invitation of Mia Amor Mottley, the prime minister, in recognitio­n of his future Commonweal­th role.

He has previously attended such handovers as a representa­tive of the Queen, most recently in Zimbabwe in 1980. Then, he watched a ceremony marking the independen­ce of Britain’s last African colony, as power was transferre­d to Robert Mugabe, its prime minister.

In 1997, he was present at the handover of Hong Kong, when he watched the lowering of the Union flag and told its people: “We shall not forget you.”

The Prince last visited Barbados in March 2019 during a Caribbean tour with the Duchess of Cornwall.

During the short visit this month, he is expected to make a speech acknowledg­ing the end of an era for the monar chy, and emphasisin­g the country’s continued Commonweal­th links.

Barbados was one of 16 remaining realms with the Queen as head of state. Republican­s hope the move will prompt other countries to follow suit in a “domino effect”. Jamaica is expected to be the next country to declare itself a republic.

The Palace has always said it is a “matter for the government and people” of any realm to decide.

Barbados intends to remain part of the Commonweal­th, which has the Queen as its head, but will replace her portrait on its dollar bill.

Last year, Dame Sandra delivered the “Throne Speech” at the state opening of the Barbadian parliament, saying: “Having attained independen­ce over half a century ago, our country can be in no doubt about its capacity for self-governance. The time has come to fully leave our colonial past behind.”

The Queen last visited the island in 1989. Her remaining realms are Antigua and Barbuda, Australia, Belize, Canada, Grenada, Jamaica, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea, Saint Kitts and Nevis, Saint Lucia, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, the Solomon Islands, and Tuvalu.

Dame Sandra, a 72-year-old former teacher, magistrate and judge, has been governor-general since 2016 and was the first woman to serve on the Barbados Court of Appeals.

The island is the first realm to become a republic since Mauritius in 1992.

It joins three other republics in the Commonweal­th Caribbean: Guyana, which replaced the Queen as head of state in 1970; Trinidad and Tobago, in 1976; and Dominica, which became a republic at the same time as declaring independen­ce in 1978.

Princess Margaret represente­d the Queen at the independen­ce ceremony in Dominica, delivering a message on behalf of her sister.

No members of the Royal family attended events for Guyana or Trinidad and Tobago, the Queen opting instead to send messages of thanks and congratula­tions, and host the outgoing governors-general.

‘The time has come to fully leave our colonial past behind’

 ?? ?? HONG KONG 1997
HONG KONG 1997
 ?? ?? The Queen inspects a guard of honour in Barbados during her Silver Jubilee tour of the Caribbean in 1977
The Queen inspects a guard of honour in Barbados during her Silver Jubilee tour of the Caribbean in 1977
 ?? ?? ZIMBABWE 1980
ZIMBABWE 1980

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