Advertisement

King Charles meets cheering Australian crowds, says ‘great joy’ to return

Charles’ 16th official visit to Australia, where he attended school in 1966, is also his first major foreign trip since cancer diagnosis

Reading Time:2 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
6
Britain’s King Charles meets people during a tour of St Thomas’ Anglican Church, North Sydney, in Sydney, Australia on Sunday. Photo: Reuters

Hundreds of well-wishers greeted Britain’s King Charles and Queen Camilla in Sydney on Sunday as the royal couple attended church, with the king saying it was a “great joy” to return to Australia in his first visit to an overseas realm as sovereign.

Advertisement
Charles’ 16th official visit to Australia, where he attended school for six months as a teenager in 1966, is also his first major foreign trip since being diagnosed with cancer.

“What a great joy it is to come to Australia for the first time as sovereign and to renew a love of this country and its people which I have cherished for so long,” he said in a speech at the New South Wales parliament.

Charles and Queen Camilla at St Thomas’ Anglican Church, North Sydney, in Sydney, Australia on Sunday. Photo: Reuters
Charles and Queen Camilla at St Thomas’ Anglican Church, North Sydney, in Sydney, Australia on Sunday. Photo: Reuters

New South Wales state lawmaker Kellie Sloane, whose electorate covers some of Sydney’s most famous beaches, wrote on social media platform X after chatting to the king that he “sends his best to the ‘amazing’ surf clubs at Bondi Beach”.

The royal couple were earlier greeted at St Thomas’ Anglican Church by the archbishop of Sydney, Kanishka Raffel, and children from the church’s Sunday school who waved Australian flags.

Camilla was given a flower bouquet by the minister’s wife, Ellie Mantle, who asked if they had recovered from jet lag after the long flight to Australia on Friday. “Sort of,” Camilla replied.

Advertisement
Inside the church, Charles and Camilla signed two bibles, including one that belonged to Australia’s first minister and chaplain of the First Fleet of ships that took convicts from Britain to the penal colony of Australia in 1788.

Outside, the royal couple shook hands and chatted to a large crowd of cheering fans, some singing God Save the King.

Advertisement