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Scottish minister leads protest at King Charles coronation event

#Scottish minister leads protest at King Charles coronation event | 来源: 网络整理| 查看: 265

A ceremony in Edinburgh marking King Charles III’s coronation has been targeted by politically significant republican protests led by a Scottish government minister.

The king was presented with Scotland’s medieval crown jewels in a short ceremony at St Giles’ Cathedral, where his late mother, Queen Elizabeth II, lay in rest with the same crown on her coffin last September.

The short event was witnessed by far fewer well-wishers than the vast crowds who thronged the Royal Mile then to watch the queen’s funeral cortege. Many Scots are away on holiday; most onlookers were curious tourists.

As the king and Camilla left their official residence at Holyroodhouse for a short drive to St Giles’, about 100 republicans noisily protested opposite the palace, within earshot of the king’s apartments, at the cost and “extravagance” of the event.

Patrick Harvie, a co-leader of the Scottish Greens and the minister for zero carbon buildings, active travel and tenants’ rights, told protesters that the public money spent on this “rigmarole” and on the coronation in London was unjustified during a cost of living crisis.

“What we’ve seen over the last few months is a genuinely extraordinary attempt to lavish your money, our money, on some of the wealthiest people, not just in this country, but some of the wealthiest people in the world, so that they can do some sort of overpriced Game of Thrones cosplay exercise,” Harvie said. “It is quite extraordinary.”

Having a monarch enriched by untaxed, inherited wealth ran counter to Scotland’s desire for a modern democracy, and an independent Scotland ought to have a directly elected head of state, he added.

Police Scotland said two women aged 20 and 21 were arrested in connection with a breach of the peace after allegedly attempting to climb over a crowd safety barrier on the Royal Mile.

The anti-oil industry protest group This is Rigged claimed the women were their activists, who wore kilts printed with the group’s name.

Police later confirmed four people had been arrested in total, with another four people issued with a warning.

Several mounted troops of Household Cavalry and massed pipers from the Royal Marines and Royal Regiment of Scotland had preceded the king and the queen consort up the Royal Mile towards St Giles’, where the violinist Nicola Benedetti and a Gaelic singer, Joy Dunlop, performed for the couple and selected guests.

Inside St Giles’, the king was presented with the Honours of Scotland, a crown and sceptre dating to the 1540s and a ceremonial sword specially forged for the occasion to replicate the original, fragile sword in the collection.

King Charles concludes Scottish coronation in day marked by protests – video

Nora McGregor, who watched the event near St Giles’ with her 10-year-old daughter, said: “The whole world watches us with curiosity wondering why we still have this tradition.”

“I think most of us really enjoy it,” she added, before gesturing to a group of republican protesters gathered across from the cathedral. “Some just don’t want to admit it. It’s a real shame folk aren’t more accepting.”

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