From Barbados to Australia, Elizabeth II in the world premieres

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    From Barbados to Australia, Elizabeth II in the world premieres
    Elizabeth

    ROME – From the islands of Barbados, which the queen called a republic a year ago, to Australia, where the royals are concerned, passing through Kenya and other former African colonies part of the Commonwealth. There are many newspapers of the former British Empire, from the Caribbean to the Pacific, to open web editions on Elizabeth II.

    Read also: Great Britain is concerned about the health of the Queen: Doctors are ‘concerned’

    In the foreground are medical updates, with press releases released in London relaunch And in Balmoral, the Scottish castle where the ninety-six-year-old Queen has been banned for several months due to deteriorating health conditions and the place of arrival of her closest family members. As news spread by Buckingham Palace, Barbados Today, one of the island nation’s most important newspapers, opened a financial and natural haven in the Caribbean. At the end of 2021, a new republican phase began for the country and its 300,000 inhabitants after 400 years of loyalty to the British crown.but for public opinion, the Queen remains a reference.

    About Elizabeth II they write the newspapers of many gods 54 Commonwealth member states, the organization of the former colonies. Among these are 14 kingdoms, with about 150 million “subjects” who recognize the queen as the head of state. This is the case in Australia, where the “Live” section hosts updates for the Sydney Morning Herald. “The Australian Kings Association is deeply concerned about the Queen’s deteriorating health and sends its thoughts and prayers to His Majesty the King, His Highness the Prince of Wales and the Royal Family,” the paper read.

    Harry and Meghan went to Scotland

    The king’s news is also highlighted in the newspapers of African countries. In Kenya, a British colony until 1963, when Elizabeth II was on the throne for ten years, the nation re-launched the Buckingham Palace “worries”. The inauguration for the Queen is also on The Independent of South Africa, a country where even politics in London chose to stay with apartheid and not with Nelson Mandela, the first democratically elected president in 1994. The paper also talks about the departure of his nephews Harry and Meghan: they went to Scotland “to be next to the Queen”.

    The news on the Dire website may be used and reproduced, provided that the source of the DIRE agency and the address www.dire.it is explicitly mentioned.

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