The meeting took place on Tuesday morning at Buckingham Palace, the royal family announced on Instagram. This was intended to commemorate the signing of the armistice more than 70 years ago. “60,000 soldiers from across Great Britain and the Commonwealth were deployed, 1,100 lost their lives,” wrote the royal family.
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Later, Charles’ sister Princess Anne (73) and his sister-in-law Duchess Sophie (59) were to hold a reception on behalf of the monarch in memory of 1953. At the beginning of February, the royal family made it public that Charles was being treated for cancer. He is not attending public appointments for the time being, but he is continuing state affairs and has already been photographed at official meetings.
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Image: TRISTAN FEWINGS (APA/AFP/POOL/TRISTAN FEWINGS)
Just the day before, Britain had rejected Russian-language reports claiming that King Charles III. had died. “We would like to inform you that the news regarding the death of King Charles III is false,” the British Embassy in Ukraine said on the X platform (formerly Twitter) on Monday. The British mission in Russia also wrote that the reports were false.
The false news of his death spread initially on Monday followingnoon in the Russian-speaking part of the Internet, fueled by Telegram channels that specialize in sensational reporting. As evidence, a facsimile of a supposed communication from Buckingham Palace was shown. The online editions of Russian tabloid media also picked up the news before it was exposed as a fake.
Charles’ daughter-in-law Princess Kate (42) is also out for a long time due to health problems. According to the palace, she is recovering from abdominal surgery. Her absence had recently caused a lot of speculation. Her husband, heir to the throne Prince William (41), was in Sheffield, central England, on Tuesday to continue his commitment to the fight once morest homelessness.