Tag: England

  • Chelsea right-back Reece James facing surgery

    Chelsea right-back Reece James facing surgery

    Chelsea right-back Reece James may be set for surgery on his knee.

    The England international suffered the blow against AC Milan earlier in the week during a Champions League group stage win.

    James had been in outstanding form with the Blues, but may now miss the World Cup with England as well.

    According to Football.London, the injury was not initially seen as too serious by Chelsea.

    However, scans on Thursday showed the problem is worse than feared.

    The 22-year-old now faces surgery and a long spell on the sidelines during a key part of his career.

  • Conversation Nigeriana (7) – By Hope O’Rukevbe Eghagha

    Conversation Nigeriana (7) – By Hope O’Rukevbe Eghagha

    Dupe: The Queen, the Great Queen is dead and buried!

    Emeka: Long live the Queen, long live the king! The king never dies, so they say!

    Dupe: True! The throne is forever; so, the monarch lives forever! There are a lot of lessons to be learnt from her reign, her life, her style, and the funeral arrangements!

    Omonefe: No throne lives for forever jor. Only God’s throne lives forever. Praise the Lord!

    Dupe: Whatever! There are lots of lessons to learn from the Elizabethan Monarchy!

    Emeka: You are right my sister. To reign as Queen of England for 70 years without a scandal linked to her name is no mean feat.

    Omonefe: You are right there. God made her reign scandal-free. Praise the Lord!

    Odia: She didn’t need a personal scandal. Her throne was scandalous enough!

    Dupe: Excuse me Odia! What do you mean?

    Bishak: Please let us not ask Odia to explain further. I know he is going to argue that the wealth of the Queen was stolen from Africa, that he crown is a combination of stolen jewels from different continents, and that her empire favoured northern Nigeria in fraudulently ascribing a higher population figure to that region in 1952!

    Odia: Mind reader! You have done well. Only that you didn’t say that her throne dethroned, humiliated, and deported the Oba of my ethnic group in 1897.

    Omonefe: And stole art works that still adorn their museums and palaces in Europe! What a shame!

    Emeka: History is a bitch! It invariably comes crawling out of the dead woods!

    Dupe: Look here gentlemen, I am interested in the good aspects of the Queen’s reign, how she was favoured by God to reign for 70 years, how she modernized the monarchy and made it more acceptable to the people of the 20th and 21st centuries, how she successfully managed her marriage to the man of her dream for 73 years, how she managed the ego of the men around her, how she was able to make friends with all the powerful people around the world! It is a lesson in diplomacy and friendship building. See, over 500 international guests flew into London for the funeral. Even some Commonwealth leaders who were ill broke their bones to join the train. President Biden was on the 14th or 15th row behind men and women of the Commonwealth! All as arranged by the Queen herself! The Emperor of Japan who traditionally forbids the sight of a corpse broke tradition and travelled to London for the funeral. My brothers, there must have been something outstanding about the Queen’s character and charisma!

    Bishak: The Gospel according to Evangelist Dupe!

    Omonefe: Praise the Lord for His wonderful work in the life of Queen Elizabeth II, Defender of the Faith! Let us not say that an adulteress now occupies the Throne of England!

    Bishak: And an adulterer too!

    Dupe: O come on! Don’t be an old hat. Old sins are forgiven!

    Omonefe: She and Lady Diana, The Peoples’ Princess will meet in heaven and sort things out!

    Emeka: In hell you mean?

    Dupe: Don’t you start!

    Emeka: I will not complain about Britain’s support for the genocide against Igbo people during the Nigeria-Biafra War because they wanted access to crude oil! Or how the British massacred the Mau Mau freedom fighters of Kenya!

    Omonefe: Let God be the Judge! If she is guilty of all you have said, she might be on her way to hell now for a rendezvous with Satan himself!

    Dupe: Come on gentlemen and lady! Why do you castigate the Queen for what the politicians of her days did? Remember that Queen Elizabeth kept her mouth shut in public on political matters? Indeed, that was one of the strengths of her reign- staying out of the fray, at least in public. Remember the very notion of Constitutional Monarchy! We do not know what she may have told the politicians in private!

    Odia: I am not bothered about what she told the politicians in private. I am concerned with the loot which she treasured and handed over to her successor upon her death! Period! The Koh-I-Noor jewel which is in the crown of the British monarch reminds everyone of their colonial past!

    Dupe: She was better than most of our traditional rulers in character, dignity, and grace. She identified and groomed her successor very early. She lived in peace with all and sundry!

    Emeka: You are right on that score. No in-fighting. She planned her funeral to the smallest detail. She communicated before and after her death. See the mammoth crowd that showed up at her funeral. No aso ebi. The choir was disciplined. Nobody went out to use the bathroom. No recognitions of people although the most powerful people in the world were in that hall. During the funeral service there was no collection of tithes, donations, and offerings. One hour service! The Bishop of Canterbury preached a six-minute sermon!

    Omonefe: Stingy people! They do not recognize the power of God Almighty. They do not know how to sow seeds in God’s name!

    Emeka: A short sermon that was not targeted at anybody made my day!

    Dupe: Exactly! Although we didn’t see her body, for obvious reasons not even the casket, yet we saw the draped coffin. When our royal fathers die it is not announced. In some cases human beings disappear. Some claim that the heart of the previous monarch must be boiled for the new king to eat! Cannibalism! Disgusting! Even if it is a metaphor, it is an inappropriate one! No one eats a human heart. It should be discarded. There is no reason for any secrecy.

    Bishak: What about the practice of demanding suicide of an aide to the king or killing persons to accompany the dead king to the other world? Barbaric! Which other world?

    Emeka: Does anybody still do that?

    Bishak: I wouldn’t know. It used to be a practice in some African kingdoms like Oyo and the Jukun people.

    Omonefe: Anachronistic. Atavistic. Retrogressive.

    Bishak: This big grammar will get you nowhere!

    Dupe: I wonder! The Queen spoke to modernizing the monarchy all around the world. It is true that her most senior staff broke his staff of office and placed it on her coffin. That was simply symbolic. It showed that his service to her was over. So, our traditional institutions could accommodate symbolisms without being barbaric!

    Emeka: She also tinkered with succession rights to allow a princess to be a possible heir to the throne unlike what used to be when the ladies were the men were put ahead of all the women!

    Dupe: You are right. In some ethnic groups in Nigeria, women are excluded from inheriting property from their father or mother! Can you beat that?

    Odia: Most societies discriminate against women. Men made the rules and continue to enforce them. In some cases, they use women to implement the obnoxious rules.  Which is a tragedy. Women ought to rebel against such wicked rules.

    Dupe: Now that Charles has taken over the throne, I hope he will have the wisdom to manage things properly, especially with the albatross of a wife, the Queen Consort (what a title?) around his royal neck. He must bring his back his rebellious son Harry somehow! That boy was traumatized by his mother’s death.

    Emeka: Spare me that joke please! Didn’t William lose a mother too? Is he reacting the same way?

    Dupe: That is where you err. We all don’t have the same capacity of resistance and react to life’s experiences differently.

    Emeka: Tell me more Professor of Clinical Psychology Dupe Ojojomijojo!

    Dupe: Not now, and don’t be sarcastic! I have a Zoom meeting to attend in ten minutes. Will dwell on that issue when next we meet! Bye for now!

    Emeka: Bye!

  • Man City making Champions League look easy – Onuoha

    Man City making Champions League look easy – Onuoha

    Former Manchester City defender Nedum Onuoha is amazed by the City’s current form.

    The Blues were 5-0 victors over latest opponents FC Copenhagen on Wednesday night.

    City have now played 11 games across the two competitions, winning nine and drawing two. In that time, they have scored 40 goals.

    After last night’s Champions League win, Onuoha told CityTV: “It just feels great to be watching that and supporting it. That’s some of the best football I’ve seen in my lifetime.

    “They’re making the UEFA Champions League look easy and it’s not, it’s not that type of competition. They’re working both sides of the game as they’re not giving them chances.”

  • Death certificate reveals cause of Queen Elizabeth II’s death

    Death certificate reveals cause of Queen Elizabeth II’s death

    Queen Elizabeth II died of old age, her official death certificate has revealed. The document released by National Records of Scotland noted the time of the Queen’s death on Thursday, September 8 as 3:10 pm (1410 GMT).

    When paying tribute to her mother the Queen, the Princess Royal revealed she was with the head of state in her last moments. Anne, who accompanied her mother’s coffin as it travelled from Balmoral to London, via Edinburgh, said: “I was fortunate to share the last 24 hours of my dearest mother’s life.”

    The princess is named as the “informant” on the document and would have notified the local registrar of her mother’s death. The Queen was laid to rest on September 19, following 70 years of service, after family, friends and the nation said a fond farewell to the late monarch.

    For the woman who was never meant to be sovereign, the Queen fulfilled her pledge to serve nation and Commonwealth and came to earn the respect of many from world leaders to the public.

    Her grieving family walked behind her coffin throughout the long day of her funeral and burial, a simple but public tribute. The emotion was clear to see on the face of King Charles III who travelled to Scotland soon afterwards where he has remained with his Queen Consort.

    British royal family return to normal duties as mourning period ends

    Meanwhile, the British monarchy and their households are returning to official duties as the period of royal mourning in memory of the late queen ends.

    Flags at royal residences were at half-mast until 8 a.m. (0700 GMT) on Tuesday, when they were raised back to full-mast, while William and Kate, the new prince and princess of Wales, will visit the nation.

    The visit will be the first visit since taking up their titles.

    After the death of the queen on Sept. 8, the royal family only carried out official duties where appropriate, and its members dressed in black as a mark of respect when in public.

    From Tuesday they are carrying out their normal official roles in full after observing the seven-day period of mourning.

    William and Kate will spend the day travelling the length of Wales, first visiting Holyhead in Anglesey, North Wales, and then travelling to Swansea in South -West Wales.

    The royal couple had promised to visit at the earliest opportunity following the death of the queen, and return hoping to begin “deepening the trust and respect” they have with the people of Wales.

    The last official visit the pair made to Wales was as duke and duchess of Cambridge to Cardiff Castle in June, where rehearsals for the Platinum Jubilee concert were taking place.

    Charles carried out one official engagement during royal mourning, holding a telephone audience with the Chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng on Thursday evening, the eve of his tax-cutting mini budget.

    The prince and princess of Wales praised volunteers and operational staff they met at Windsor that day, for their efforts at events surrounding the queen’s committal service.

    The king travelled to Scotland soon after the queen’s funeral last Monday and could remain at his home of Birkhall into early October, following the tradition set by the late monarch.

    The queen would normally spend around 10 weeks at her Scottish home during summer, returning to London around the time the autumn session of parliament began.

    Planning is likely to be under way for Charles’ coronation, and Lavender Hill Magistrates’ Court in south London heard the suggestion a date has been set for the national event expected in 2023.

  • UEFA Nations League: England still winless, draw Germany 3-3

    UEFA Nations League: England still winless, draw Germany 3-3

    England came back from 2-0 down to draw Germany 3-3 on Monday night UEFA Nations League clash at Wembley stadium.

    The result meant England are still winless in their last six games in the UEFA Nations League.

    England captain, Harry Kane scored from 12 yards to give England their third goal as they fought back from 2-0 down to draw 3-3 with Hansi Flick’s side last night.

    Kane has  admitted that his team were under heavy scrutiny before their UEFA Nations League clash with Germany.

    He added that Gareth Southgate’s men had a ‘point to prove’ against Germany, having gone six games without a win.

    “The boys have been under pressure with recent results and we all came out here with a point to prove,” Kane told Channel 4.

    “We’re going to have to be ready come the start of the tournament. Major tournament football is different to any other football you play for England.

    “The pressure is high and the concentration has to be high and I feel like we respond well to that.”

    He added, “We will go away with our clubs and hopefully, everyone goes away fit, strong and ready to come back in November.”

  • Bukayo Saka named England’s Player of the Year

    Bukayo Saka named England’s Player of the Year

    Arsenal star Bukayo Saka has been named England’s Player of the Year for the 2021-22 season.

    The 21-year-old won the award ahead of second-placed Declan Rice, of West Ham, following a public vote.

    Saka was praised for the manner in which he bounced back from the heartbreak of missing the decisive penalty in the shootout of the Euro2020 final.

    The forward made nine appearances for his country in the aftermath of that defeat to Italy, and scored World Cup qualifying goals against San Marino, and home and away to Andorra.

    Tottenham striker Harry Kane came third.

  • What’s next now that Queen Elizabeth II is buried?

    What’s next now that Queen Elizabeth II is buried?

    Britain’s longest reigning monarch Queen Elizabeth II, who died on September 8 at the age of 96 years has been buried in the King George VI Memorial Chapel in St George’s Chapel, Windsor Castle, where her late husband Prince Philip and her sister Princess Margaret are also interred.

    For the past week, normal life in Britain effectively has been put on hold as the country observed a National Mourning period for reflection in response to the demise of the Sovereign who had devoted her entire life to the service of her country.

    Her son, now King Charles III who also goes down in British history as the oldest and the longest-serving heir apparent, began his reign as soon as his mother passed and is understood to want a slimmed-down official royal family to reduce the cost to the public purse.

    The 73 years old King has promised to “faithfully” follow the examples set by his mother, but he is also expected to be unique and a unifying figure for all parts of Britain. As Prince of Wales, Charles was outspoken about several issues that were important to him, but as King, he is expected to maintain political neutrality.

    Last year, speaking at the opening ceremony of the COP26 climate summit in Glasgow, Scotland, he warned that the time for addressing climate change had “quite literally run out”. In order to tackle the problem, he said, “We have to put ourselves on what might be called a war-like footing.”

    In relation to the Commonwealth realms, it is hoped that King Charles III will be more conscious of societal changes and modernise relations with Commonwealth countries. As Prince of Wales, he commented at the Commonwealth’s Heads of Government meeting in Kigali how the legacy of slavery needed to be confronted.

    The former Prince of Wales in his Easter message earlier this year, covertly criticised former Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s immigration policy that sends all asylum seekers to Rwanda for processing when he expressed concern about the “unutterable tragedy” of those who had been “forced to flee their countries and are “in need of a welcome, of rest, and of kindness.”

    During a news conference following the death of the Queen, Deputy British High Commissioner to Nigeria Ben Llewellyn-Jones said King Charles III was personally vested in Nigeria, having visited the country four times since 1990 and will strengthen the relationship between both countries. 

    In his first public address as the new Sovereign on September 9, King Charles III acknowledged that his life will change as he takes on his new responsibilities when he admitted: “It will no longer be possible to give so much of my time and energies to the charities and issues for which I cared so deeply”.

    There is also the task of changing and updating everything – from images of the queen on flags, stationery, stamps, and currency to legal mentions of Her Majesty, which will cost the country a fortune to implement within a short period of two years amidst rising inflation.

    Whichever direction the King goes, his actions regarding how to refashion the monarchy and maintain public support for it as a ceremonial institution at the centre of British public life will be closely monitored and weighed against the record established by Queen Elizabeth II.

    The coronation ceremony where the King is officially crowned will likely take place sometime next year, according to speculations, because of the preparation required. Queen Elizabeth II’s took place in June 1953, 16 months after she ascended the throne in February 1952.

    Upholding years of tradition, the coronation ceremony which is typically a state event will hold in Westminster Abbey where William the Conqueror was crowned and King Charles III will be the 40th monarch to be crowned there. Being a state event, the government pays for it and ultimately decides the guest list.

  • Elizabeth II to Charles III: The sun continues setting  on England – By Owei Lakemfa

    Elizabeth II to Charles III: The sun continues setting on England – By Owei Lakemfa

    As a child growing up on Lagos Island, I frequently walked through the Race Course to  school. The premises of the old House of Representatives building was in that complex. Sitting outsize in a regal flowing gown was the huge bronze statue of Queen Elizabeth II. Sculptured by Nigeria artist, Ben Chukwukadibia  Enwonwu, it was commissioned in 1956 by the Queen  during her visit to Nigeria. She was the Nigerian Head of State because  the country was a British colony.

    I loved the sculpture, more so   when hanging on the wall of my home was a photograph of my beautiful mother striking the same pose. However, a major contrast was that while the Queen was quite slim, my mother had some bulge, and I was told that I was the bundle of joy growing in her.

    Then a few years later, it was reported that the statue had to be removed because protesting students had tried to destroy what was the symbol of neo-colonialism and British interference in Nigerian politics. The statue which was conceived as the  symbol of British-Nigeria friendship,  later found a home in the Museum in Lagos where such relics are housed.

    Under colonialism, it was a crime to insult the British crown. You can therefore imagine the courage of a Nigerian youth, Raji Abdallah who on being hauled before the colonial courts in 1948 for treason, famously told the judge: “I hate the crown of Britain with all my heart because to me and my countrymen, it is a symbol of oppression, a symbol of persecution, and in short, a material manifestation of iniquity.”

    There were many cases of brutish acts by the British colonialists  in Nigeria which supported Abdallah’s characterisation   of the British Crown. In 1929 when unarmed women in Eastern Nigeria protested against  the imposition of taxes on them, the British army attacked them, killing  55  women and injuring fifty. On November 18, 1949 when striking  workers in the Iva Valley Mines in Enugu refused to assist the management evacuate explosives, armed British policemen opened fire on the unarmed workers. Within minutes, 21 Nigerian workers were shot dead  with 51 injured.

    This image of the iniquity of the British Crown also manifested to Kenyans  whose lush    lands the British wanted to convert to their permanent settlement. On February 6, 1952, while on holidays in Kenya, Princess Elizabeth’s father, King George VI died and she was immediately named Queen. That same year, the Kenyans began their campaign for independence. In the eight-year insurgency, 32 White settlers  and about 200 British soldiers, policemen  and auxiliaries were killed while in the name of  Queen Elizabeth II,  the British killed an estimated 20,000 Kenyans. Officially, 1,090 Kenyans including their leader, Dedan Kimathi were hanged, and entire Kenyan villages were detained en-mass in Nazi-style concentration camps.

    There are have been mixed reactions  following  the  September 8, 2022 passing of Queen Elizabeth II. Some mourn her death while others snigger at her allegedly being the greatest receiver of stolen goods in world history. This is quite uncharitable because unlike Queen Elizabeth I who invested in   the dubious but quite lucrative business of piracy and even knighted her leading pirate, Francis Drake, Elizabeth II is not   known to have  taken part in any direct  criminality. Her guilt stems from the fact that she was Queen of England, the nation that conquered  and annexed  Scotland, Wales  and Northern Ireland and invaded, occupied or  fought  90 per-cent of the countries  that today make up the United Nations; that is  171 countries of the 193 countries in the UN. In the process, it looted countries around the world, stealing amongst other treasures,  human beings, land, crowns, gold, diamonds and  artifacts. One of the crowns Queen Elizabeth II held on to is the  Kohinoor Crown  with 2,800 diamonds which contains the 105 carat Kohinoor  diamond stolen  by Britain in the mid-19th Century  from the Mughal Peacock throne in Delhi, India. This is the crown Queen Camilla is billed to wear at Charles III’s coronation.

    Britain under her was quite wealthy; in terms of gold alone, it held about 400,000 bars worth over  £200 billion. But a lot of that wealth was stolen. For instance,  between 1705 and 1938, Britain stole over £45 trillion from India alone. But that was not under the reign of Iya Charlie, as many Nigerians called the Queen; she was just the inheritor.

    After the   May 26, 1908 discovery of oil in Iran, Britain cornered virtually the whole oil wealth   until the Iranians revolted. The British Government which in 1914 formally took control of the Iranian oil, decided  that only 16 per-cent of the oil wealth would  go to Iran. Despite this level of insatiable greed, it was   Britain alone that calculated how much wealth the Iranian oil generated, then decided how much of it was paid as tax to itself before purporting to pay the 16 per-cent.

    In protest,  Iran decided on May 2, 1952 to nationalize its oil. This did not go down well with Britain which with  the United States on August 19, 1953, overthrew the Iranian government led by Mohammed Mussadeq and imposed Shah Reza Pavlavi as the dictator of Iran. This was in the sixth month of Elizabeth II’s reign as Queen. Iranians were not to regain control of their oil wealth until 1979 when it staged its revolution.

    There is a trite saying: “Uneasy lies the head that wears a crown” This may be true of the Queen as she tried to balance crown  and family; it appears the latter suffered. Despite her best efforts and interventions, three of her four children were enmeshed in endless scandals especially marital.  It told of her judgment of character because under the  Royal Marriages Act 1772, she had to consent to the marriages of her children and lineage.

    Her  only daughter, Princess Anne like many  young people, had various relationships before marrying Captain Mark Phillips on November 14, 1973. They had two children, Peter and Zara Philips before they divorced in 1992. On December 12, that same  year, she  married current husband, Sir Timothy Laurence.

    Part of the complication is that Princess Anne dated Andrew Parker Bowles in 1970, but the problem was that he was a Catholic, so technically, the Queen would not approve their marriage. On  July 4,  1973  Bowles married  Camilla Rosemary  Shand. They had Tom and Laura Bowles.

    Prince Charles dated  Lady Sarah Elizabeth Spencer but they could not be allowed to marry, some say it was because she was not a virgin. So, Sarah Spencer introduced her younger sister, Diana to Charles. They met thirteen times before their clearly, pre-arranged marriage on July 29, 1981.

    Despite both being married, Prince Charles and  Mrs Camilla Parker Bowles began dating in 1986. Camilla was actually, Diana’s ninth cousin. This infidelity  led to complications in the marriages with  Camilla divorcing Bowles in 1995 and Charles divorcing  Diana in 1996, a year before she was killed in a car crash.

    Queen Elizabeth who ordered the  Charles-Diana divorce, would not accept  Camilla, a divorcee as her new daughter in-law more so as she would be in line to be Queen. Eventually, she bowed to  pressure  and Charles married Camilla in 2005.

    Perhaps the most complicated of all is Prince Andrew, the Queen’s third child who was married to the feisty Sarah Margaret Ferguson better known as Fergie.  They got married on March 19,  1986, had two daughters, princesses  Beatrice and Eugenie, and after some scandals, divorced in 1996 but still live together.

    Prince Andrew was implicated in an international paedophile scandal for  which he paid a financial settlement to Virginia Giuffre whom he had sexual relations with when she was 17.

    Queen Elizabeth II has played her role and will be laid to rest on  Monday, September 19, 2022. It is left for King Charles III to play his role. Whatever the case, the sun will continue to set on the English monarchy.

  • Prince William speaks out first time after Queen’s death

    Prince William speaks out first time after Queen’s death

    For the first time after the death of his grandmother, Queen Elizabeth II, Prince William has spoken out, saying he will forever grieve her loss.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Prince William to have said he knew “this day would come” and that “it will be some time before the reality of life without Grannie will truly feel real”.

    In a statement on Saturday, William, who is now the Prince of Wales, stated that he will honour her grandmother’s memory by supporting his father, King Charles II in every way he can.

    The statement reads: “On Thursday, the world lost an extraordinary leader, whose commitment to the country, the Realms and the Commonwealth was absolute. So much will be said in the days ahead about the meaning of her historic reign.

    “I, however, have lost a grandmother. And while I will grieve her loss, I also feel incredibly grateful. I have had the benefit of The Queen’s wisdom and reassurance into my fifth decade.

    “My wife has had twenty years of her guidance and support. My three children have got to spend holidays with her and create memories that will last their whole lives.

    “She was by my side at my happiest moments. And she was by my side during the saddest days of my life.

    “I knew this day would come, but it will be some time before the reality of life without Grannie will truly feel real.

    “I thank her for the kindness she showed my family and me. And I thank her on behalf of my generation for providing an example of service and dignity in public life that was from a different age, but always relevant to us all.

    “My grandmother famously said that grief was the price we pay for love. All of the sadness we will feel in the coming weeks will be testament to the love we felt for our extraordinary Queen.

    “I will honour her memory by supporting my father, The King, in every way I can”.

  • Queen Elizabeth II’s funeral arrangements released

    Queen Elizabeth II’s funeral arrangements released

    The Royal Family of England has released the funeral arrangements for the late Queen Elizabeth II.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports that the State Funeral of The Queen will take place at Westminster Abbey on Monday 19th September at 1100hrs BST.

    Prior to the State Funeral, The Queen will Lie-in-State in Westminster Hall for four days, to allow the public to pay their respects.

    According to a statement by the Royal Family, The Queen’s Coffin currently rests in the Ballroom at Balmoral Castle.

    “Her Majesty’s Coffin will travel to Edinburgh tomorrow, Sunday 11th September, by road, to arrive at the Palace of Holyroodhouse, where it will rest in the Throne Room until the afternoon of Monday 12th September.

    “On the afternoon of Monday 12th September, a Procession will be formed on the forecourt of the Palace of Holyroodhouse to convey the Coffin to St Giles’ Cathedral, Edinburgh. The King and Members of the Royal Family will take part in the Procession and attend a Service in St Giles’ Cathedral to receive the Coffin.

    “Her Majesty’s Coffin will then lie at rest in St Giles’ Cathedral, guarded by Vigils from The Royal Company of Archers, to allow the people of Scotland to pay their respects.

    “On the afternoon of Tuesday 13th September, The Queen’s Coffin will travel from Scotland by Royal Air Force aircraft from Edinburgh Airport, arriving at RAF Northolt later that evening. The Coffin will be accompanied on the journey by The Princess Royal.

    “The Queen’s Coffin will then be conveyed to Buckingham Palace by road, to rest in the Bow Room. On the afternoon of Wednesday 14th September, the Coffin will be borne in Procession on a Gun Carriage of The King’s Troop Royal Horse Artillery from Buckingham Palace to the Palace of Westminster, where The Queen will Lie-in-State in Westminster Hall until the morning of the State Funeral.

    “The Procession will travel via Queen’s Gardens, The Mall, Horse Guards and Horse Guards Arch, Whitehall, Parliament Street, Parliament Square and New Palace Yard. After the Coffin arrives at Westminster Hall, The Archbishop of Canterbury will conduct a short service assisted by The Very Reverend Dr David Hoyle, Dean of Westminster, and attended by The King and Members of the Royal Family, after which the Lying-in-State will begin,” the statement reads.

    During the Lying-in-State, members of the public will have the opportunity to visit Westminster Hall to pay their respects to The Queen. On the morning of Monday 19th September, the Lying-in-State will end and the Coffin will be taken in Procession from the Palace of Westminster to Westminster Abbey, where the State Funeral Service will take place.

    Following the State Funeral, the Coffin will travel in Procession from Westminster Abbey to Wellington Arch. From Wellington Arch, the Coffin will travel to Windsor and once there, the State Hearse will travel in Procession to St. George’s Chapel, Windsor Castle via the Long Walk. A Committal Service will then take place in St George’s Chapel.