Close X
Saturday, January 11, 2025
ADVT 
International

Queen Intervenes In Succession Plan, ‘Wishes’ Prince Charles Is Heir

IANS, 19 Apr, 2018 01:08 PM
    Queen Elizabeth II today appealed to Commonwealth leaders to appoint her son, Prince Charles, to succeed her as their head, making her first direct intervention into a succession plan for the 53-member grouping.
     
     
    The 91-year-old monarch, the Head of the Commonwealth, said it was her "sincere wish" that Prince Charles takes over "one day", as she opened the two-day Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) in London, also attended by Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
     
     
    The post of Head of Commonwealth is not hereditary and will not pass automatically to the 69-year-old Prince of Wales on the Queen's death.
     
     
    The 53 leaders, gathered at Buckingham Palace, are to make a decision on the succession tomorrow, the BBC quoted 10 Downing Street as saying.
     
     
    In her opening speech, the Queen described the group as "growing stronger year by year" and the world's "great convening powers", which would benefit from the stability to be offered by the royal family.
     
     
    "It is my sincere wish that the Commonwealth will continue to offer stability and continuity for future generations and will decide that one day the Prince of Wales will carry on the important work started by my father in 1949," the Queen said during her address at the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) at Buckingham Palace.
     
     
    "By continuing to treasure and reinvigorate our associations and activities I believe we will secure a prosperous and more sustainable world for those who follow us," she said.
     
     
    Her intervention comes amid ongoing speculation over a successor to the monarch.
     
     
    Some experts have argued that it marks an opportunity for the organisation to distance itself from its colonial roots and appoint a non-royal to the role. Others, however, claim that it is the royal family that holds the grouping of former British colonies together.
     
     
    "It is to the incredible credit of the Queen and the royal family that it (Commonwealth) still exists, because without them it wouldn't. People have danced around the edges of it for too long," said Lord Marland, chairman of the Commonwealth Enterprise and Investment Council (CWEIC).
     
     
    The CHOGM in Britain will mark the last such summit to be hosted by the Queen, who has ruled out long-haul travel and therefore unlikely to travel to any future CHOGMs to be hosted by other member-states.
     
     
    A decision on succession will be taken collectively by the 53 heads of government of the Commonwealth and the subject is expected to be the central feature of deliberations when the leaders get together for the CHOGM leaders' retreat on Friday at the grand Waterloo Chamber of Windsor Castle.
     
     
    There is reportedly no general consensus over the Prince of Wales as the next Head of the Commonwealth, with India yet to confirm its stand on the matter.
     
     
    Prince Charles is reportedly keen to step into his mother's shoes but the decision will be up to the presidents and prime ministers representing the 53 member-countries, which will then be announced by the Commonwealth Secretary-General, Baroness Patricia Scotland.
     
     
    Besides the issue of the future of the Commonwealth, the Queen also spoke about the importance of intra-Commonwealth trade and protecting the world's oceans.
     
     
    "Here at Buckingham Palace in 1949 my father (King George VI) met the heads of government when they ratified the London declaration which made up the Commonwealth we know today, then comprising of just eight nations. Who would have guessed that a gathering of its member states would number 53 or comprise of 2.4 billion people," she said.
     
     
    In her opening remarks, British Prime Minister Theresa May thanked the Queen for her service to the organisation and told the leaders the summit would "take on some of the 21st century's biggest questions".
     
     
    "There have been difficulties, successes, controversies, but I believe wholeheartedly in the good that the Commonwealth can do," she said.
     
     
    Issues under discussion at the summit also include ocean conservation, cyber security, and trade between the countries.
     
     
    Gunners at St. James' Park near the palace ended the formal launch ceremony with a 53-gun salute in honour of all members of the Commonwealth, following which the leaders, including Prime Minister Modi, entered Lancaster House for the executive session of CHOGM.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Man Who Put Up Famous Burlington, Ont., Christmas Light Display Dies After Ladder Falls From Roof

    Man Who Put Up Famous Burlington, Ont., Christmas Light Display Dies After Ladder Falls From Roof
    The family of Douglas Musson of Burlington, Ont., said the 82-year-old had been trying to fix a leak on Monday when the ladder he was on fell.  

    Man Who Put Up Famous Burlington, Ont., Christmas Light Display Dies After Ladder Falls From Roof

    B.C. Engineer Develops Scanner To Diagnose Eye Diseases Early And Save Vision

    B.C. Engineer Develops Scanner To Diagnose Eye Diseases Early And Save Vision
    VANCOUVER — A British Columbia engineering science professor has developed a high-resolution scanner that he says will revolutionize how eye diseases are diagnosed to prevent vision loss.

    B.C. Engineer Develops Scanner To Diagnose Eye Diseases Early And Save Vision

    Despite Nikki Haley Threat, UN Votes To Condemn Trump's Jerusalem Decision, Canada Abstains

    Despite Nikki Haley Threat, UN Votes To Condemn Trump's Jerusalem Decision, Canada Abstains
    OTTAWA — Canada abstained from a contentious United Nations vote Thursday that delivered a resounding rebuke to Donald Trump over his decision to move the U.S. embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem.

    Despite Nikki Haley Threat, UN Votes To Condemn Trump's Jerusalem Decision, Canada Abstains

    Online Outrage After Canadian TV Host Steve Ecklund Kills Cougar In Northern Alberta

    Online Outrage After Canadian TV Host Steve Ecklund Kills Cougar In Northern Alberta
    Steve Ecklund Posted Several Photos Of Him Holding The Dead Cougar; Another Of Him Making A Stir-fry From The Meat

    Online Outrage After Canadian TV Host Steve Ecklund Kills Cougar In Northern Alberta

    19 Hurt As Car Deliberately Hits Pedestrians In Melbourne

    19 Hurt As Car Deliberately Hits Pedestrians In Melbourne
    Two men were arrested on Thursday after a car drove into a crowd of pedestrians outside Melbourne's iconic Flinders Street station, the Australian police said.

    19 Hurt As Car Deliberately Hits Pedestrians In Melbourne

    One Canadian Dead, 3 Injured In Mexico Bus Crash That Killed 12 People

    One Canadian Dead, 3 Injured In Mexico Bus Crash That Killed 12 People
    Mexican officials said eight Americans, two Swedes, and one Mexican were the others killed in the crash.

    One Canadian Dead, 3 Injured In Mexico Bus Crash That Killed 12 People