Desk Report
Publish: 26 Mar 2022, 07:54 pm
Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge, and Prince William, Duke of Cambridge, chat with Jamaican Olympic Gold medalist Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce as they tour the Trench Town community in Kingston, Jamaica, on Tuesday. || Photo: AFP
Prince William has said the
British royal family would support the Bahamas’ decisions about its future, on
the third stop of a Caribbean tour.
The tour has been met with
protests in a region weighing its future relations with the monarchy.
The Bahamas, a former British
colony, gained independence in 1973, but it remains a member of the
Commonwealth of Nations and recognizes the British monarch as head of state.
Speaking at a reception in Nassau
on Friday hosted by the Bahamas’ governor-general, William — whose official
title is the Duke of Cambridge — noted the upcoming 50th anniversary of the
country’s independence.
“And with Jamaica celebrating 60
years of independence this year, and Belize celebrating 40 years of
independence last year, I want to say this: we support with pride and respect
your decisions about your future,” William said.
“Relationships evolve. Friendship
endures.”
Prince William and wife Kate’s
tour was intended to mark the 70th anniversary of the coronation of Queen
Elizabeth II.
But it has been met with protests
and accusations of being a “colonial tour.”
In Jamaica on Tuesday,
placard-bearing protesters outside the British High Commission demanded that
the monarchy pay reparations and apologize for its role in the slave trade that
brought hundreds of thousands of Africans to the island to toil under inhumane
conditions.
Prime Minister Andrew Holness
then pointedly told William in front of television cameras that the nation was
“moving on” as an independent country.
The visit follows increasing
calls for Jamaica to follow Barbados and become a republic by ditching the
queen as head of state.
William during that trip
expressed his “profound sorrow” about the history of slavery, calling the
practice “abhorrent.”
“It should never have happened,”
he said.
But no formal apology has been
made by the British royal family.
Britain is increasingly
confronting its colonial past, in particular its memorials to historical
figures with ties to the slave trade.
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