Antelope Valley Press

King Charles III meets with leaders during Kenya visit

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NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) — King Charles III met with religious leaders Friday to promote peace and security in Kenya during the last day of his four-day trip.

The king spent a rainy Friday morning touring Mandhry Mosque, East Africa’s oldest mosque, before meeting with Christian, Hindu, Muslim and African traditiona­l faith leaders in an Anglican cathedral in Kenya’s coastal city of Mombasa. The region has seen an increase in radicaliza­tion and militants kidnapping or killing Kenyans.

Kenya celebrates the 60th anniversar­y of its independen­ce in December after decades of British rule. The two countries have had a close — though sometimes challengin­g — relationsh­ip since the Mau Mau revolution, the prolonged struggle against colonial rule in which thousands of Kenyans died.

Although he didn’t explicitly apologize for Britain’s actions in its former colony, Charles expressed earlier in the visit his “greatest sorrow and the deepest regret” for the violence of the colonial era, citing the “abhorrent and unjustifia­ble acts of violence” committed against Kenyans as they sought independen­ce.

Protesters demanding the king’s apology for colonial abuses and reparation­s to victims were stopped by police during the first day of the trip. A planned press conference by victims of human rights abuses by British forces training in Nanyuki town was forcefully canceled by police.

Charles’ trip is his first state visit to a Commonweal­th country as monarch, and one that’s full of symbolism. Charles’ mother, the late Queen Elizabeth II, learned that she had become the UK monarch while visiting a game preserve in the East African nation — at the time a British colony — in 1952.

At Charles’ meeting with the Coast Interfaith Council of Clerics at the Mombasa Memorial Cathedral, a plaque marking his visit was unveiled.

Meanwhile, Queen Camilla met with staff, volunteers and survivors of sexual and gender-based violence at the offices of a women’s advocacy organizati­on called Sauti ya Wanawake, Swahili for “the Voice of Women,” to share her own experience working with survivors and learn how the group supports people who have suffered such attacks. She was gifted a Swahili shawl locally known as a kanga.

Later, the royal couple visited Fort Jesus, a UNESCO World Heritage Site that was built by the Portuguese in the 1500s, and met local artists whose works were on display there. The king and queen were treated to a coastal Mijikenda community ceremonial dance at the fort before boarding a tuktuk — an electric motorized rickshaw — for a photo opportunit­y before they were seen off by Kenyan President William Ruto at Mombasa’s Moi Internatio­nal Airport to conclude the visit.

Earlier in the visit, Charles met with families of wellknown Kenyan freedom fighters. While at the coast, the king observed a drill by an elite unit of British-trained Kenya marines and visited conservati­on projects.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Britain’s King Charles III (center), arrives Friday to visit Fort Jesus, a UNESCO world heritage site in Mombasa, Kenya.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Britain’s King Charles III (center), arrives Friday to visit Fort Jesus, a UNESCO world heritage site in Mombasa, Kenya.

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