quarta-feira, 22 de junho de 2022

Prince Charles and Camilla arrive in Rwanda for Commonwealth meeting / Get ready to cringe as Boris Johnson and Prince Charles meet at Rwanda summit


Get ready to cringe as Boris Johnson and Prince Charles meet at Rwanda summit

 

Prince Charles’ first outing as head of the Commonwealth follows his reported criticism of Boris Johnson’s flagship immigration policy.

 

BY ESTHER WEBBER, ZOYA SHEFTALOVICH AND CRISTINA GALLARDO

June 22, 2022 7:45 pm

https://www.politico.eu/article/uk-boris-johnson-and-prince-charles-meet-at-rwanda-summit/

 

LONDON — That awkward moment when you have to play nice with the heir to the throne who’s reportedly seething at your asylum plans.

 

Brace for some weapons-grade discomfort this week as Boris Johnson and Prince Charles meet in Rwanda for the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) in Kigali in the wake of a major row that’s played out in the pages of the U.K. media.

 

The British prime minister and the country’s future monarch will both take part in Friday’s Commonwealth summit opening ceremony, with Johnson giving a speech.

 

Both sides will be hoping a bust-up over Johnson’s controversial plan — currently paused by the courts — to deport asylum seekers to Rwanda doesn’t overshadow a summit that marks a major test of diplomatic tact for two men not exactly known for holding back.

 

Speaking ahead of his flight, Johnson said he hoped the summit would be an opportunity “to shed some of the condescending attitudes towards Rwanda and how that [migration] partnership might work.”

 

He added “it is still the case that no UK court has ruled our our plan unlawful and no international court has ruled our plan unlawful.”

 

On whether he intends to raise the topic with Prince Charles, he said: “All I can say is that I think that the policy is sensible, measured, and it’s a plan to deal with the grotesque abuse of people crossing the Channel.”

 

In an extraordinary intervention that raised eyebrows in government, the Times previously reported that Charles had privately described the deportation policy as “appalling.” Clarence House put out a rare statement not denying the remarks by the prince but saying it wished to “restate that he remains politically neutral” and that “matters of policy are decisions for government.”

 

Cue some hostile briefing in the other direction, with one Cabinet minister telling the Sunday Times that Charles “is an adornment to our public life, but that will cease to be charming if he attempts to behave the same way when he is king. That will present serious constitutional issues.”

 

Despite Clarence House’s assertions, Charles has already shown signs he will be a more political monarch than his mother, with his strong views on the environment and urban planning well-known.

 

But the latest row could hardly come at a more sensitive time for the Commonwealth, a 54-member association of former British territories, as it faces big questions over its future.

 

“The Commonwealth is a sort of imperial hangover. It was a way of somehow continuing those relationships after the end of the British empire,” said Hans Kundnani of the foreign policy think tank Chatham House. “Partly because of that it’s always going to have this stigma. It’s never quite going to be embraced by some of these countries unless you radically rethink it.”

 

It’s Charles’s first appearance at the Commonwealth summit since taking over its stewardship from Queen Elizabeth. And it comes as the relationship between the Commonwealth and the British monarchy looks increasingly frayed.

 

Countries that have no colonial ties to the U.K., Gabon and Togo, are applying to join and Commonwealth realms such as Barbados, Jamaica and Australia are either opting to remove the monarch as head of state or laying the groundwork to do so.

 

Australia is also making noises about ditching the monarchy altogether.


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