I’m not sure their police officers felt the same from the looks on their faces, but the King and Queen, we’re told, were on a “huge high” after making their way through the scrum of entourage, security and locals while on walkabout in Ravenna.
It’s no wonder then that just a few days earlier, while visiting a school in Rome, Camilla told members of the British press that we should “dream on” if we thought the King‘s health worries were going to slow him down.
“He loves his work and it keeps him going,” she said. “I think it’s wonderful, you know, if you’ve been ill and you are recovering, you’re getting better and now he wants to do more and more and more.
“That’s the problem… that’s what he’s driven by. Helping others.”
Image: The royal couple on four-day Italy visit. Pic: Reuters
It’s a sentiment shared by those who work around him.
Has anyone told him to take it easy? “We’ve all tried!” was the reply from one senior palace official.
Part of the problem though is apparently the amount the King reads.
“Because he reads a lot he learns a lot,” they added. “And in this role, as when Prince of Wales, he knows he is fortunate to be in a position to make a difference, and is determined to do just that.”
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King and Queen visit Rome landmarks
You could see it on this four-day visit to Italy. The couple, don’t forget both of them are in their mid-70s, nipped around all the key sites in Rome, posing for those obligatory tour photo opportunities, including outside the colosseum.
Not ‘about tourism’
I know the palace weren’t happy with headlines such as “Roman holiday”, or references to them being like tourists.
A palace insider remarking these visits are not “about tourism; there is a very serious business behind them”.
That was made abundantly clear in the King’s speech to the Italian parliament; the significance undoubtedly heightened, with the trip coming at a time of great economic challenges and great military uncertainty with what’s happening in Ukraine.
Image: King and Queen visit Ravenna. Pic: PA
The Royal Family have long been used as part of the post-Brexit charm offensive, the King couldn’t have delivered his line any clearer when he stressed that we remain a European country.
A senior palace source said, there’s “no accident that it should happen after the visits to France and Germany – and I think we saw from the reaction of the Italian government… with the visit to Ravenna and those huge crowds of enthusiastic Italians”.
King could meet Trump this summer
They added: “All of it really showed soft power at its best – something of which the UK can be rightly proud and which delivers huge benefit for UK interests overseas.”
But a more complex meeting with another president could soon lie ahead.
Image: Donald Trump’s visit in 2019. Pic: PA
Remember that letter delivered by Keir Starmer to Donald Trump from the King, suggesting a more personal meeting as well as a state visit?
There are rumours that sometime this summer Mr Trump could meet the King in Scotland.
If those rumours are correct, I’d put my bets on either the end of June after Ascot or the beginning of July, or towards the end of August or early September, when the King is up there anyway for his summer holidays.
We know that the US president hugely admires the monarch, but you wonder how they might navigate one particularly tricky topic, Canada.
The King as their head of state, Mr Trump threatening to make it his 51st state.
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King and Queen leave Italy
Recent meetings between the monarch and Canada’s outgoing and newly appointed prime minister’s we’re told were simply “normal expressions of support”.
More state visits
But a palace insider was keen to emphasise “showing support for Canada is something he’s always done and that he will continue to do”.
The palace at the moment won’t confirm when a meeting with Trump may take place, only guiding that we will see more inward and outward state visits this year.
One thing that is guaranteed when it does happen, Number 10 will be hoping for more of what we’ve seen this week, the personal touch.
That’s partly why Italy has been seen as a great triumph, with the crowds calling out not for the King or Queen but for “Carlo” and “Camilla”.
“There is something very powerful about a constitutional monarchy,” a palace official said.
“Something very powerful about an institution where people have grown up knowing the King.
“They’ve known him since the day he was born, they’ve known him his whole life or their whole life, so when they engage with him it’s as if they’re engaging with someone they feel they genuinely know on a personal level.”
Image: King wants to do ‘more and more’. Pic: PA
An asset to Number 10
This week’s 20th wedding anniversary was a reminder that the King and Queen haven’t always been so warmly received.
But whatever you think of the royals, there is a skill in what they do.
I recently saw the King next to Sir Keir Starmer on a visit to Cornwall, the prime minister holding back as the King made a beeline to make small talk with a crowd of people.
As we saw in Italy, he is an asset that Number 10 know they can deploy.
Of course there is a caveat at the moment, he is still having cancer treatment. I understand doctors are happy with the King’s current workload, and it’s said his treatment is going tremendously well.
Positive news at a time when the government certainly needs him on top form, with an American president still to charm.
A Sikh woman who was raped in a “racially aggravated attack” in the West Midlands says she “would never wish this on anyone”.
Police were called just before 8.30am on Tuesday after the woman, who is in her 20s, reported being attacked by two white men in the area around Tame Road in Oldbury.
The Sikh Federation (UK) said the perpetrators allegedly told the woman during the attack: “You don’t belong in this country, get out.”
The woman, who is entitled to anonymity as the victim of a sex offence, issued a statement through community group Sikh Youth UK.
Thanking everyone for their support, she said: “We are going through a lot, but the strength and kindness shown by the right people in the community has been incredible and I can’t thank them enough for being my voice.
“I would never wish this on anyone. All I was doing was going about my day on my way to work, and what has happened has deeply affected us.”
Calling her family her “rock,” she went on: “The police are doing their best to find those responsible, and I truly hope they are caught so that this doesn’t happen to anyone else.”
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She said she was “truly humbled” by the love and support she’d received.
She added: “I want to personally thank my family, Sikh Youth UK, who have been so supportive, the local Gurdwara committees and Sikh orgs, and everyone in my community who has stood by me. I cannot thank you enough for helping me get through this difficult time.”
An emergency meeting was later held at the Guru Nanak Gurdwara temple in Smethwick, a few miles from Oldbury, following concerns within the community.
Police are still trying to identify the perpetrators of the attack, which they say is being treated as “racially aggravated”.
Officers said CCTV, forensic and other enquiries are well underway, but have appealed for anyone in the area who may have seen the men, or have any further information, to contact the force.
One of the men is described as having a shaved head, of heavy build, and was reported to be wearing a dark coloured sweatshirt and gloves.
The second man was reportedly wearing a grey top with a silver zip.
A man has admitted arson after a major fire at an MP’s constituency office.
Joshua Oliver, 28, pleaded guilty to starting the fire which destroyed the office of Labour MP Sharon Hodgson, at Vermont House in Washington, Tyne and Wear.
The fire also wrecked a small charity for people with very rare genetic diseases and an NHS mental health service for veterans.
The guilty plea was entered at Newcastle Magistrates’ Court on the basis that it was reckless rather than intentional.
Image: Hodgson, who has been an MP since 2005, winning her seat again in 2019. Pic: Reuters
The Crown did not accept that basis of plea.
Oliver, of no fixed address, had been living in a tent nearby, the court heard.
Northumbria Police previously said it was “alerted to a fire at a premises on Woodland Terrace in the Washington area” shortly after 12.20am on Thursday.
“Emergency services attended and no one is reported to have been injured in the incident,” it added.
Drone footage from the scene showed extensive damage to the building.
A spokesperson for the Crown Prosecution Service said: “Our prosecutors have worked to establish that there is sufficient evidence to bring the case to trial and that it is in the public interest to pursue criminal proceedings.
“We have worked closely with Northumbria Police as they carried out their investigation.”
Oliver was remanded in custody and will appear at Newcastle Crown Court on Tuesday, 14 October.
Dozens of people have gathered at a Sikh temple to attend an emergency meeting after police in the West Midlands said they are investigating the rape of a woman as a “racially motivated attack”.
The victim, reported to be a British-born Sikh aged in her 20s, told officers a racist remark was made to her during the attack in Oldbury, which was reported to police just before 8.30am on Tuesday.
The Sikh Federation (UK) said the perpetrators allegedly told the woman during the attack: “You don’t belong in this country, get out.”
Jas Singh, principal advisor to the Sikh Federation (UK), was among the group of faith and community leaders responsible for holding the meeting at the Guru Nanak Gurdwara temple in Smethwick, a few miles from Oldbury, following concerns within the community.
“I think if you look at it in the context of the climate, it makes it even more worrying because there is a trend of hatred… the targeting of migrants,” he said.
“Ultimately, what that means is the targeting of people’s skin colour, and as Sikhs we have the most distinct, unique identity,” he added.
“We bear the brunt of all prejudice and ignorance, and hate.”
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Image: Principal advisor to the Sikh Federation (UK) Jas Singh
Similar sentiments were raised at the meeting, with many horrified by the reports of the sexual assault as well as concerns about their own safety.
“People are trying to divide us,” said a woman in her 30s, who did not want to be named but said, as a Sikh woman, she wanted to be present to have her voice heard.
She was not only referencing the sexual assault but also what she believes has been an increase in overt discrimination.
“Let’s call it what it is, this is racism,” she told the meeting, as she broke down in tears.
Reverend Nick Ross, from Smethwick’s Holy Trinity Church, was also in attendance at the emergency meeting.
He commented on “offensive” graffiti that had been left on the side of the wall of the Sikh temple, while saying his Anglican church had also been defaced.
“We cannot just ignore it, it will go on and it will build, and there will be incidents like this,” he said, referencing racial tensions across the country.
Image: Faith and community leaders organised the meeting at the Sikh temple
Police are still trying to identify the perpetrators of the attack and want to speak to anyone who may have seen two white men in the area.
The first is described as having a shaved head and a heavy build, and was wearing a dark sweatshirt with gloves on, and the second was reportedly wearing a grey top with a silver zip.
Chief Superintendent Kim Madill, of Sandwell Police, said: “We are working really hard to identify those responsible, with CCTV, forensic and other inquiries well under way.
“We fully understand the anger and worry that this has caused, and I am speaking to people in the community today to reassure them that we are doing everything we can to identify and arrest those responsible.
“Incidents like this are incredibly rare, but people can expect to see extra patrols in the area.”