President Murmu meets King Charles; to attend Queen Elizabeth's funeral today
Indian President Droupadi Murmu, who is in London to attend the funeral of Queen Elizabeth on Monday, signed a condolence book on behalf of the Indian government and met King Charles and Queen Consort Camilla at a reception for foreign leaders of state at Buckingham Palace on Sunday (September 18).
Murmu was accompanied by Acting High Commissioner Sujit Ghosh at Lancaster House in London, where visiting world leaders are stopping by to sign a book of condolence in memory of Queen Elizabeth II who died aged 96 in Scotland on September 8.
On Sunday, the President also visited the Westminster Hall where the queen is Lying-in-State until the morning of the state funeral on Monday.
Murmu, who arrived on Saturday evening, will join around 500 world leaders and worldwide royals in a congregation of around 2,000 expected at the Abbey for a sombre ceremony starting at 11am local time and concluding with a two-minute silence around an hour later.
All visiting heads of state, government and official overseas guests were expected at the reception hosted by King Charles and Queen Consort Camilla at what has been described as an “official state event.
Queen’s ties with India
Zaki Cooper, who worked in the Queen’s Royal Household between 2009 and 2012 and has written widely about the monarchy, believes the Queen enjoyed an “affectionate relationship with India” and was instrumental in the transition from empire to Commonwealth.
“By recognising the desire for many countries to self-determination, she embraced the Commonwealth,” Cooper told PTI.
“The Commonwealth often featured in her messages and speech. She was the organisation’s head and also its inspiration. Her legacy of developing friendly relations between nations is one that will continue to inspire the Commonwealth, as it embarks on a new chapter with King Charles III as its head,” he said.
Also read: Britain readies to bid farewell to Queen Elizabeth: all about the funeral
Representatives of the Realms and the Commonwealth will be among those in the congregation at Monday’s funeral service.
Hours before the ceremony, the Queens Lying-in-State will close to members of public queuing for the past few days, with waits of around 24 hours expected over the weekend as the queue stretches to around 10 km long.
The gates to Abbey will open at 8 am local time on Monday for the visiting dignitaries and guests invited to the funeral, which will include hundreds of people who were recognised in the Queen’s Birthday Honours earlier this year, many honoured by the late monarch for their extraordinary contributions to the response to the COVID-19 pandemic and volunteering in their local communities.
Under the plans in place for the day, all heads of state and overseas government representatives, including foreign royal families, are expected to gather at a central venue and travel under “collective arrangements” to the Abbey.
The state funeral service will be conducted by the Dean of Westminster, with Prime Minister Liz Truss and Commonwealth Secretary General Baroness Patricia Scotland reading lessons. The Archbishop of York, the Cardinal Archbishop of Westminster, the Moderator of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland and the Free Churches Moderator will say prayers and the sermon will be given by the Archbishop of Canterbury, who will also give the Commendation.
The conclusion of the first state funeral in the UK in 57 years, last held at the Abbey for Britain’s war-time Prime Minister Winston Churchill in 1965, will be followed by a service and a private burial ceremony at St. Georges Chapel in Windsor. The late monarch will be laid to rest in the chapel at Windsor Castle.
(With inputs from agencies)