One estimate is that Starting Monday (12), 10,000 police officers will be on duty every day in the cityπ§π· It is indeed a reasonable routine; Crowded streets all day, the king goes, the king returns.
On Monday, Charles addressed Parliament for the first time as a monarch.π§π· He received condolences from MPs and Lords and said his connections to his “late mother” passed through Parliament.
The British capital will see increasingly chaotic days. Hotels are already seeing an increase in bookings, and many streets are closed.
The coffin with the body of Elizabeth II arrives in London on Tuesday (13). On Wednesday (14th), he will go in procession to Westminster Hall, an 11th-century building, the oldest building in Parliament. For four days, including early morning, people will be able to approach the sarcophagus. The queue will run all the time, but it must go on for hours and hours.
On the morning of Monday (19th), prof State funeral in Westminster Abbey, attended by heads of state and government around the world. A lot of security will be concentrated there.
Meanwhile, the scent of flowers fills the air in Buckingham Palace and adjoining Green Park. But honors became problematic. Park management has pleaded with people to stop taking teddy bears and balloons, leaving only organic or compostable items. In the case of flowers, unwrapped – no plastic.
Maria and her colleagues were the first to arrive two days earlierπ§π· On Wednesday (14th), they want to see the procession up close. She says it’s important to see it with your own eyes, not just on TV, because it’s a way Absorbed as soon as the country lost Elizabethwhich is still difficult to understand.
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