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King Charles and Queen Camilla head to the capital

Details are out on the King and Queen’s jam packed schedule as they head to the nation’s capital.

‘Shocking’: All six Australian state premiers refuse to welcome King Charles

It’s going to be a jam-packed day for King Charles and Queen Camilla as they head to the nation’s capital.

The King and Queen have left Sydney’s Admiralty House bound for Canberra.

The royal couple are set to touch down in the Capital late on Monday morning, where they will lay a wreath at the Australian War Memorial and meet members of the public about 11am.

A mass of royal fans are expected to flock to the memorial to welcome their majesties’, hoping to catch a glimpse and perhaps even snap a photo of the historic visit.

At Canberra Airport, school children are gathering to welcome the King and Queen, with some of the kids dancing and laughing in anticipation.

The kids have been given earplugs and little flags to wave.

King Charles waves as he leaves Admiralty House in Kirribilli. Picture: NewsWire / Damian Shaw.
King Charles waves as he leaves Admiralty House in Kirribilli. Picture: NewsWire / Damian Shaw.
Hundreds of royal fans flocked to St Thomas's Anglican Church in North Sydney on Sunday to catch a glimpse of King Charles and Queen Camilla. Picture: NewsWire / Toby Melville
Hundreds of royal fans flocked to St Thomas's Anglican Church in North Sydney on Sunday to catch a glimpse of King Charles and Queen Camilla. Picture: NewsWire / Toby Melville
Royalists welcomed the King and Queen to the church with Union Jacks. Picture: NewsWire / Toby Melville
Royalists welcomed the King and Queen to the church with Union Jacks. Picture: NewsWire / Toby Melville

With streets set to close throughout the city amid heightened security around the royal visit, people wishing to see the King and Queen have been advised to leave plenty of time for travel.

There is a noticeably heightened security presence in Canberra as the capital prepares to receive the King and Queen. Picture: NewsWire / Martin Ollman
There is a noticeably heightened security presence in Canberra as the capital prepares to receive the King and Queen. Picture: NewsWire / Martin Ollman
People wishing to see the King and Queen have been advised to leave plenty of time for travel to account for street closures. Picture: NewsWire / Martin Ollman
People wishing to see the King and Queen have been advised to leave plenty of time for travel to account for street closures. Picture: NewsWire / Martin Ollman

After the Australian War Memorial, King and Queen will then head to Parliament House for a ceremonial welcome to Australia’s centre of power.

Cannon fire will echo across the capital as they receive a 21-gun salute and a guard honour at around 1pm.

Members of the Royal Regiment of Australian Artillery were preparing to welcome the King and Queen on Sunday.. Picture: NewsWire / Martin Ollman
Members of the Royal Regiment of Australian Artillery were preparing to welcome the King and Queen on Sunday.. Picture: NewsWire / Martin Ollman

A reception hosted by Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and his fiancee Jodie Haydon will take place at Aussies Cafe inside Parliament House’s Great Hall.

The cafe plays a crucial role in keeping all who work in the halls of power caffeinated.

Later in the afternoon, the royal couple will part ways for separate engagements.

The King will meet with Opposition Leader Peter Dutton and visit the national science agency’s National Bushfire Research Centre to meet firefighters and scients.

Meanwhile, the Queen will attend an event for domestic violence survivors.

Their majesties will round off the visit with a trip to the Australian National Botanic Gardens, before heading back to Sydney.

King Charles’ visit is the first by a reigning monarch in 13 years, and the first ever visit by a reigning king.

Not all fanfare

Not everyone is enthused about the royal tour, with Australia’s republicans saying it is time to farewell the monarchy, and Indigenous rights groups lamenting it as a reminder of Australia’s dark colonial past.

Among those not joining in the fanfare is Greens Senator Mehreen Faruqi, who said on Monday “the monarchy symbolises an era that should be left behind for good, not celebrated.”

“It will come as no surprise that I will not be participating in any pomp and ceremony celebrating the monarchy, but I’d be happy to go to the airport to wish them a final goodbye in the hope that this is the last time the crown visits this country as rulers,” she said.

“Preserving the British monarchy is to preserve white supremacy and the systemic racist structures that were built by the Empire and persist today.”

Placard-brandishing protesters gathered and royalists faced off near St Thomas’ in North Sydney ahead of the service attended by the King and Queen on Sunday.

Pro-Palestine protesters and Indigenous rights activists unfurled Banners reading “decolonise” and “empire built on genocide”.

There were also chants of “Always Was, Always Will be, Aboriginal Land.”

In response to a request to meet from the Australian Republican Movement earlier this year, the King said the decision to become a republic rested with the Australian people.

It has been 25 years since Australia last held a vote on becoming a republic.

Originally published as King Charles and Queen Camilla head to the capital

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Original URL: https://www.thechronicle.com.au/entertainment/celebrity-life/royals/king-charles-and-queen-camilla-head-to-the-capital/news-story/2fd0f426f394d6e767a2eeee55d6fc83