King Charles III to host first state visit of reign welcoming S Africa president
London, UK - King Charles III next week hosts his first state visit as monarch, welcoming South African President Cyril Ramaphosa and his wife to Buckingham Palace.
The last state visit to the UK came in June 2019, when queen Elizabeth II hosted US president Donald Trump and his wife Melania. Charles has yet to announce where he will go on his first overseas visit as king, and this was the first invitation he extended since succeeding his late mother in September.
The pomp of the major diplomatic event will be clouded by events in South Africa, where Ramaphosa risks impeachment for allegedly covering up a crime.
Christopher Vandome, a senior research fellow at the Chatham House international affairs institute in London, said
‘setting the right tone will be crucial’. He said London - a former
colonial power in South Africa - needed to avoid lecturing about Pretoria’s UN voting record on
Ukraine while South Africans are still sore about lack of Western support during the COVID crisis.
Climate change, trade and Charles’s vision for the Com
monwealth will also likely be high on the agenda, Vandome said.
Ramaphosa was last in Lon
don for the state funeral of the queen at Westminster Abbey in September.
His state visit comes more than a decade after the last by a South African leader, when Jacob Zuma came to the UK in 2010. Ramaphosa arrives on Monday before an official programme starts on Tuesday, including a state banquet at Buckingham Palace.
Charles and Queen Consort Camilla will be in charge of welcoming Ramaphosa and First
Lady Tshepo Motsepe but will
also see the visiting couple meet other senior royals.
Heir to the throne Prince William and his wife Kate,
Princess of Wales, will take him to join Charles and Camilla for a ceremonial military welcome.
Charles’s youngest brother Prince Edward has also been recruited to accompany Ramaphosa to London’s Kew Gardens and a biomedical research centre.
Also on the agenda is an address to lawmakers from both houses of parliament and a
meeting with Prime Minister
Rishi Sunak in Downing Street.
Impeachment cloud
A protege of Nelson Mandela - who was on first name terms with Charles’s mother - Ramaphosa stood alongside the anti-apartheid icon when he walked out of jail in 1990.
In a symbolic moment, the South African leader on Tuesday will view a memorial stone for Mandela, installed in Westmin
ster Abbey in 2018 on the centenary of his birth.
After leaving politics to become one of Africa’s wealthiest businessmen, Ramaphosa returned to become Zuma’s deputy in 2014 and gained the presidency in 2018.
He is now fighting for his political life and facing calls to resign as the deeply divided ruling
party African National Congress (ANC) is to hold a vote on its leadership in December.
A scandal in which Ramaphosa is accused of concealing a multi-million dollar cash theft has piled pressure on him. He denies any wrongdoing.
He faces an accusation that he failed to report a heist at his luxury cattle farmhouse in which robbers took Us$4mn in cash and instead organised for the robbers to be kidnapped and
bribed into silence. The president has acknowledged a burglary but denies kidnapping and bribery,
saying he reported the break-in to the police.
A panel appointed by South Africa’s parliament is set to determine whether to impeach him. South Africans are also deeply frustrated by the eco
nomic situation, with an official unemployment rate of 33 per cent and constant power out
ages.