Los Angeles Times

Wait to visit queen’s coffin hits 24 hours

- By Mike Corder, Jill Lawless and Danica Kirka Corder, Lawless and Kirka write for the Associated Press.

LONDON — A surging tide of people — as varied as London retirees and former England soccer captain David Beckham — has lined up to file past Queen Elizabeth II’s coffin as it lies in state at Parliament, so many that authoritie­s Friday had to call a temporary halt to more visitors joining the miles-long queue.

By late afternoon, a live tracker of the queue to get into Westminste­r Hall said it had reopened, but the British government warned that the wait time to cover the five miles from the start of the line in Southwark Park to Parliament had climbed to more than 24 hours. The government also warned that “overnight temperatur­es will be cold.”

The mourners kept silently streaming into Westminste­r Hall even as King Charles III and his three siblings stood vigil around the flag-draped coffin for 15 minutes Friday evening. A baby’s cry was the only sound.

Those who came often bowed before the coffin or made a sign of the cross. Several veterans, their medals shining in the spotlights, offered sharp salutes. Some people wept. Many hugged one another as they stepped away, proud to have spent hours in line to offer a tribute, even if it lasted only a few moments.

Beckham was spotted in the line of mourners near Britain’s Houses of Parliament at lunchtime Friday. He’s believed to have joined the queue at 2 a.m. and to have lined up for more than 10 hours with thousands of others.

Wearing a white shirt and black tie, he bowed briefly to the coffin before moving out of Westminste­r Hall.

“We have been lucky as a nation to have had someone who has led us the way her majesty has led us, for the amount of time, with kindness, with caring and always reassuring,” Beckham said. “I think that’s the one thing that we all felt safe and we will continue that with the royal family. But I think her majesty was someone special and will be missed, not just by everyone in our country but everyone around the world.”

Helena Larsen, 76, arrived just too late at the park to get into the line.

“We have literally got here and they have shut it in front of us,” she said, adding that she would probably hang around the area until the gates were reopened.

London Mayor Sadiq Khan said viewing the queen’s coffin lying in state was an unforgetta­ble experience.

“You’re in Westminste­r Hall in her presence, with a crown on top of her coffin, and it’s incredibly emotional,” he told the Associated Press.

Meanwhile, a delegation of Chinese officials reportedly was barred from visiting the historic hall in the Houses of Parliament where the late queen’s coffin is lying, as geopolitic­s cast a shadow over the solemn pageantry.

The Chinese ambassador to the U.K. has been banned from Parliament for a year after Beijing sanctioned seven British legislator­s last year for speaking out against China’s treatment of its Uyghur minority in the far-west Xinjiang region.

The offices of Prime Minister Liz Truss and of House of Commons Speaker Lindsay Hoyle declined to comment Friday on a report by Politico saying the Chinese delegation would not be allowed into Westminste­r Hall.

In Beijing, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokespers­on Mao Ning said that she had not seen the Politico report but that as host of the queen’s funeral, the U.K. government should “follow the diplomatic protocols and proper manners to receive guests.”

A Chinese delegation is expected to attend the queen’s Monday funeral, which is in Westminste­r Abbey church, not Parliament. Funeral organizers have not published a guest list.

After a day out of the public eye, King Charles III flew to Wales on Friday on the final leg of his tour of the countries that make up the United Kingdom.

Charles, who for decades before his accession to the throne was the Prince of Wales, visited Llandaff Cathedral in Cardiff for a service of prayer and ref lection in honor of his late mother. After the service he and Camilla, the Queen Consort, greeted crowds of well-wishers, including flag-waving schoolchil­dren as people chanted, “God save the king!”

A small group protested the visit, one person holding up a banner saying: “King? No thanks.”

The king later traveled to the Welsh parliament, the Senedd, to receive condolence­s from legislator­s and replied to them, telling members of the parliament that Wales “could not have been closer to my mother’s heart.”

Charles said he felt “immense gratitude for the privilege” of serving for decades as Prince of Wales, the title traditiona­lly bestowed on the heir to the throne. His eldest son, Prince William, now has that title.

Charles returned to London to stand vigil at his mother’s coffin in the evening with his siblings, Princess Anne, Prince Andrew and Prince Edward.

Before the vigil, Edward said the royal family had been “overwhelme­d by the tide of emotion that has engulfed us and the sheer number of people who have gone out of their way to express their own love, admiration and respect” for “our dear mama.”

On Saturday, all eight of Queen Elizabeth II’s grandchild­ren are expected to stand vigil beside her coffin.

Charles’ sons, Prince William and Prince Harry, will attend the vigil along with Princess Anne’s children, Zara Tindall and Peter Philips; Prince Andrew’s daughters, Princess Beatrice and Princess Eugenie; and the children of Prince Edward, Lady Louise Windsor and Viscount Severn.

William, who after his grandmothe­r’s death is now the heir to the throne, will stand at the head of the coffin and Harry at the foot. Both princes, who are military veterans, will be in uniform.

London police said Friday that the queen’s state funeral Monday will be the largest policing event the force has ever handled.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States