The Daily Telegraph

Duchess of Sussex to explore Nigerian lineage

Couple’s trip to African country will focus on injured veterans amid bid for 2029 Invictus Games

- BY Victoria Ward deputy Royal Editor

THE Duchess of Sussex is looking forward to visiting Nigeria to “explore her ancestry and lineage”, a government official has revealed.

The Duke of Sussex, 39, and the Duchess, 42, will arrive in the African country today for a “private” whirlwind tour that will take in three cities in three days. The trip, their first to Nigeria, is intended to highlight the country’s efforts to rehabilita­te injured soldiers as it bids to host the Invictus Games in 2029. The Duchess will also host a “Women in Leadership” event.

But for the Duchess, it is a much more personal trip, Air Vce Mshl Abidemi Marquis, director of sports at the Nigerian Defence Ministry, suggested during a press briefing yesterday.

It comes after the Duchess revealed on her Archetypes podcast last October that she had discovered, via a genealogy test, that she was “43 per cent Nigerian”. Asked if she knew which tribe her ancestors were from, the Duchess admitted she did not but said she planned to “dig deeper into all of this”.

Mr Marquis said the Sussexes’ visit would prove a huge boost to the nation’s military personnel before adding of the Duchess: “You know, recently, (she) did a DNA genealogy test and it was confirmed that she’s 43 per cent Nigerian, so she also is looking forward to coming to Nigeria to explore her ancestry and lineage.”

The Duke revealed at the opening ceremony of the Invictus Games in Dusseldorf last September that his wife would be cheering on Nigeria. During a visit to the Nigerian team, the Duchess was even given a Nigerian name, Amira Ngozi Lolo. Amira means warrior princess from a legend, while Ngozi means blessed and Lolo means royal wife.

The Duke, who has been in London for the past three days, will be reunited with the Duchess in Nigeria.

“The reception will be a quiet reception because they will be travelling 14 hours to get to this place,” Mr Marquis said. “They will be taken to the hotel.”

After a rest, the couple will visit the Light Academy, a school in nearby Wuse, before meeting Gen Christophe­r Musa, the Chief of Defence Staff, at the Nigerian Defence Headquarte­rs.

In the afternoon, they will travel to Kaduna, where the Duke will meet injured military personnel at the Nigerian Army Reference Hospital.

Mr Marquis said the royal visit would help aid the recovery of injured military personnel by boosting their “their personal self-esteem” and “improving mental health”. The hospital was at the centre of a local news story in February, when a suspected outbreak of Lassa fever is said to have killed three health workers and a patient within two days.

Tomorrow, the Duke will field his own team during a seated volleyball match played by Nigeria’s Invictus team, at the officer’s mess. The exhibition match was organised to engage wounded and injured soldiers, Mr Marquis said. It is unclear whether the Duke will take part. At the inaugural Invictus Games in London, 2014, he appeared to enjoy joining a demonstrat­ion.

The Duke and Duchess will then attend a reception for military personnel and their families, as well as the families of soldiers killed in action and serving servicemen and women. The invitation to visit Nigeria was extended at the Invictus Games last September, when the Nigerian team joined the event for the first time.

Nigerian military chiefs are hoping the visit will give a major boost to their campaign to host the Invictus Games. The country is thought to be vying with Italy and South Korea to host the 2029 Games after Canada in 2025 and either the UK or the US in 2027.

Mr Marquis outlined why they wanted the Sussexes to visit their country: “One, because Nigeria is now a member of the Invictus community, and his coming will lay credence to the fact that, you know, being part of the community, you need to be accepted.

“Number two, that Nigeria is also looking forward to hosting an Invictus Games. And three, the need to build a state-of-the-art structure for the management of the wounded and injured soldiers, particular­ly those with post traumatic stress syndrome.”

‘You know she did a DNA genealogy test and it confirmed that she’s 43 per cent Nigerian’ ‘Nigeria is a member of the Invictus community. Being part of the community, you need to be accepted’

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