The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)

Royals highlight scourge of plastic on beach visit

- BY TONY JONES

The Duchess of Cornwall kicked off her shoes and felt the sand beneath her feet when she joined the Prince of Wales on an Irish beach to highlight the scourge of plastic pollution.

Camilla quickly removed her 2in heels when the couple walked on to Derrynane beach to hear about the work of local schoolchil­dren collecting waste from the shore.

Charles told his wife “you’ll get sand in your shoes” when she later slipped them back on her stocking feet.

Before getting into a helicopter, which had brought the royals to the stunning south-west Irish coastline, she could be seen shaking the sand from her footwear.

Nearby was the home o f t h e c e l e b r a t e d 19th Century campaigner Daniel O’Connell, who had championed Catholic emancipati­on and was a leading figure in the fight to abolish slavery.

The royal couple toured the mansion and met descendant­s of the lawyer and statesman whose beliefs have influenced successive world figures.

Rickard O’Connell, the campaigner’s great-greatgreat-grandson, said about the royal visit: “It means an awful lot.

“There have been periods when his legacy wasn’t as recognised or kept alive through different periods but I think more and more there’s a real recognitio­n how relevant he is today.

“Things like anti-slavery, universal rights, talking about the suffrage movement celebratin­g their hundred years recently, he was one of the early proponents of a lot of those movements.

“The peaceful element was critically what he was about.”

The beach-combing event featuring the schoolchil­dren was organised by Sea Synergy, a marine awareness body.

It had collected an array of plastic objects from flipflops and bottles to a salad pot from Macedonia, which they showed to the royals.

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 ??  ?? Charles and Camilla on the beach at Derrynane
Charles and Camilla on the beach at Derrynane

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