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The Prince of Wales and Duchess of Cornwall Explore Umm Qais, Jordan

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The Prince of Wales and The Duchess of Cornwall during a visit to the Great Sphinx of Giza, on the third day of their tour of the Middle East. November, 2021.
The Prince of Wales and The Duchess of Cornwall during a visit to the Great Sphinx of Giza, on the third day of their tour of the Middle East. November, 2021.

THE PRINCE OF WALES AND THE DUCHESS OF CORNWALL VISIT THE HASHEMITE KINGDOM OF JORDAN AND THE ARAB REPUBLIC OF EGYPT

Umm Qais, Jordan

 Wednesday, 17th November

ENGAGEMENT 6

The Prince of Wales and The Duchess of Cornwall will go on a walking tour of Umm Qais 

HRH Princess Dana Firas, a global advocate for heritage protection and preservation, will accompany Their Royal Highnesses throughout the tour which will highlight the Hellenic, Roman, Byzantine and Early Muslim history of the site. During the visit, His Royal Highness will stop to plant a tree to symbolise the UK-Jordanian partnership and in celebration of the centenary anniversary for the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan. The tour will then continue to visit the work done by Turquoise Mountain and Newton-Khalidi Fund. 

Umm Qais is the site of the ancient city of Gadara and dates back to the 3rd Century BC. One of the Decapolis towns, Gadara was a centre of Greek culture in the region. Umm Qais’ stunning view, religious and political history and biodiversity make it an interesting site to visit and indicative of the range of tourism opportunities in Jordan. 

Turquoise Mountain was founded by The Prince in 2006 to revive historic areas and traditional crafts, provide jobs, skills and a renewed sense of pride in cultural traditions. Turquoise Mountain are supporting conservation work to restore two large Ottoman-era courtyards and the 2nd Century western theatre. 

ENGAGEMENT 7 

The Prince of Wales will visit the International Rescue Centre (IRC) at the Al Nuzha Community Centre 

The Prince of Wales will be greeted by: 

  • Her Excellency Farah Al Daghistani, Executive Director of the Jordan Hashemite Fund for Human Development 
  • Dominik Bartsch, Jordan Representative for the United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR) 
  • Suuad Jarbawi, Regional Vice President of the IRC 
  • Sharifa Sarra Ghazi, Jordan Director of the IRC 
  • Pippa Bird, Deputy Development Director at the British Embassy in Amman 

His Royal Highness will visit the Al Nuzha Community Centre which is supported by UNHRC (UN High Commission for Refugees.) During the visit His Royal Highness will visit their computer lab, and speak to children using the facility, before going to an outside playground to meet local children and volunteers at the centre. The Prince will then meet refugee families receiving UK assistance through UNHCR. His Royal Highness will also watch a short video about IRC’s work in Jordan and meet refugees and Jordanians supported by IRC. 

Al Nuzha Community Centre opened in June 2018 and was one of the first community centres in Jordan to provide assistance and activities for Jordanians and refugees of different nationalities as part of UNHCR’s ‘One-Refugee Approach’. Managed by UNHCR and the Jordanian Hashemite Fund for Human Development (JOHUD), the centre aims to promote peaceful coexistence between refugees and Jordanians and create a better protection environment for all. The Community Centre provides a safe space for refugees to gather, exchange ideas, engage in community life and strengthen their sense of belonging. A variety of activities are provided at the centre, ranging from educational classes for children to livelihood skills training for adults. All activities are designed to empower refugees and help them move towards self-reliance. 

The IRC Economic Recovery and Development (ERD) programme was started in 2016 and so far, 10,625 young Syrian and Jordanians have received entrepreneurial skills, business training, and financial literacy training, and a further 752 have received training in employment skills. In addition, IRC provides counselling and mentorship to new businesses and has supported 494 young Syrians and Jordanians with counselling sessions. IRC also partners with private sector and local organizations for job placement and apprenticeship opportunities. 

In late 2012, the IRC increased its capacity to ensure that women and girls have access to life-saving case management, psychosocial services, social networks, and protection through the utilization of a complementary approach whereby women can access static Women and Girls’ Safe Spaces (WGSSs) as well as mobile service delivery. The WGSSs across the kingdom are the cornerstone of this strategy. In 2021, the IRC women and girls centres in Irbid, Ramtha, Mafraq, East Amman, and Azraq camp connect more than 33,200 women and adolescents to counselling, training, and most importantly, each other. 

During the visit, His Royal Highness will meet refugees who have turned their lives around with the support of the UK, IRC, UNHCR and JOHUD. 

Rania, 20 

Rania is one of the thousands of Syrians who was forced to flee Aleppo from besiegement and aerial bombardment in 2013. Rania and her family joined many other families who rented a small truck to leave Aleppo. They crossed Jordan’s border to Azraq refugee camp and stayed for 15 days before settling in Amman. Rania dropped out of school and got married, however adjusting to married life proved difficult for her. She heard about the IRC’s Women and girls centre in East Amman and enrolled in its activities alongside psychosocial support sessions (PSS). Rania received PSS and financial support from the IRC’s Women Centre. She started to read books, and that’s when she discovered her writing skills and wrote her first novel. It’s now available in bookstores. Rania went back to school, and she dreams of becoming a psychologist. Today, Rania is working on her second novel as her goal is to become a successful writer and finish her studies. 

Sumaya, 31 

Sumaya is a Sudanese refugee from Darfur. The situation left her no choice but to flee her hometown to Khartoum, where she got a diploma in aircraft maintenance engineering. Sumaya came to Jordan in 2018. During COVID, the team continued to serve those in need remotely; that’s when Sumaya started to get PSS sessions over the phone alongside cash assistance to help her meet her life’s basic needs. Sumaya aspires to obtain a bachelor’s degree in aircraft maintenance engineering and to work in this field. 

Mariam, 37 

Mariam is a Syrian mother of three children living in Amman. She had to flee Syria in 2014. Mariam loves nursing, volunteering, and recycling. Mariam benefited from the psychosocial support sessions and case management, which helped her overcome the traumas she has been through during the journey from Syria to Jordan. 

Hudaifa, 30 

Hudaifah is a Jordanian living in Amman. Alongside his day-to-day job distributing gas cylinders, he is a passionate beekeeper which he regularly does with his friend Yousef. He loves beekeeping and the process of harvesting honey from the apiary. Hudaifah wants nothing more than to transform his passion for bees into a full-time business, which is why he joined the IRC’s Rescuing Futures business training program and received a business grant to start his project. 

Osama, 33 

Osama is a Syrian refugee who came to Jordan in 2013. He works as a tailor in Amman. He first got into tailoring 15 years ago through learning from his father back in Syria. Osama was ambitious enough to dream of starting his own workshop and becoming even more self-sufficient. Through a business training program offered by the IRC, Osama received a grant for his sewing business. With this support, Osama has started his business, increased profit, and employed three other Syrian refugees. 

Faihaa, 38 

Faihaa used to live in Damascus with her husband and three children. They fled Syria in 2012 and headed to Amman in search of safety after a bomb exploded near the barbershop where her husband was getting a haircut. Faihaa started an art workshop in Jordan together with her husband, Hayyan. Their project started as a drawing and painting workshop, but they kept improving it. They began with portraits and later created woodwork covered with elaborate designs inspired by ‘Damascene Ajami Art.’ They created art pieces in the same style and then came up with their own patterns on wood and cloth. 

ENGAGEMENT 8

The Duchess of Cornwall will visit the Princess Taghreed Secondary Girls School 

At the school, Her Royal Highness will visit Jordanian and Syrian refugee boys and girls, who will be participating in an Arabic literacy class through the ‘RAMP’ programme. Her Royal Highness will also meet girls aged between 15 to 17 during a vocational education class and engage in a discussion with them on the challenges of Covid-19 on their education, their return to face-to-face learning and their future hopes and ambitions as young women in Jordan. 

Princess Taghreed Secondary School is a public, secondary school in a suburb of Amman that currently hosts around 1000 Jordanian and Syrian refugee children. 

Since 2016, the UK has led the international community to support the landmark ‘Jordan Compact’ commitment made at the ‘Syria and the Region Conference’ to ensure all children regardless of their nationality are able to receive quality education. This year through a commitment of £9m, the UK will support over 185,000 Syrian and other refugee children access public education in Jordan. The UK also currently supports 650,000 boys and girls with essential foundational skills of literacy and numeracy through the ‘early grade reading and maths’ programme ‘RAMP’ in partnership with USAID. 

ENGAGEMENT 9

The Duchess of Cornwall will attend a Women of the World (WoW) event at the Manara Arts and Culture Café 

The Duchess of Cornwall will be greeted by: 

  • Her Excellency Haifa Al Najjar, Minister of Culture 
  • Angela Spilsbury, Development Director at the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office in Jordan 
  • Judy Kelly CBE, Founder and Director of WoW Foundation 
  • Faisal Tutunji, Owner of the Manara Arts and Culture Café 

Her Royal Highness will proceed to the second floor where the Minister of Culture will say a few words, and The Duchess will then meet some of the guests. Her Royal Highness will take a seat at the front of the room; Lt. Col. Al Nasser (Director of Women’s Affairs with the Jordan Armed Forces) and Eng. Abeer Al-Bashiti (recipient of the Newton-Khalidi Fund Leaders in Innovation Programme) will talk about their experiences, and Judy Kelly will give an overview of the WoW Foundation. Her Royal Highness will then say a few words. 

Manara is the Arabic word for “lighthouse”. The venue is a cultural hub located in Jabal Al-Weibdeh, one of the oldest neighbourhoods of Amman. Manara Arts and Culture celebrates food, drink, art, music and learning. It provides a space for creative individuals to work and meet, and contains a library, coffee house, and a gym for functional fitness and calisthenics. 

The WOW Foundation was created by Jude Kelly CBE in 2018 to run the global movement that is WOW – Women of the World Festivals. The Festivals began in the UK in 2010, launched by Kelly at the Southbank Centre London, where she was Artistic Director, to celebrate women and girls, taking a frank look at what prevents them from achieving their potential, raising awareness globally of the issues they face, and discussing solutions together. To date, WOW has reached over 2 million people in 17 countries on 6 continents, in locations including Australia, Brazil, China, Egypt, Finland, Nepal, Nigeria, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Somaliland, the UK and the USA. In June 2020, WOW held its first ever worldwide online festival focused on women and girls — WOW Global 24. 

Women’s economic participation in Jordan is one of the lowest globally, with only 14% of women aged 15 and above employed. Although 60% of women in the labour force have a university degree or higher, compared to 23% for men, high-skilled women face unemployment rates that are between two and three times higher than men with similar education levels. For women wishing to set up their own businesses, access to finance is a challenge, largely due to a lack of collateral. Only 27.2% of women have bank or transaction accounts, also making it difficult for banks to lend to them. Debt default leads to prosecution and imprisonment, which disproportionately affects women. Other barriers to female economic participation include the double burden of juggling childcare and working responsibilities, limited access to transport, harassment and low wages. 

ENGAGEMENT 10

The Prince of Wales will visit the Royal Scientific Society (RSS) 

The Prince will be greeted by Her Royal Highness Princess Sumaya bint El Hassan, President of the Royal Scientific Society, along with the three Vice Presidents of the RSS. Princess Sumaya will accompany His Royal Highness to the RSS Cafeteria, where they will meet His Royal Highness Prince Hassan to observe four exhibitions of the RSS’s work. The Prince of Wales, Princess Sumaya and Prince Hassan will then proceed to a private dining room for Business Leaders roundtable discussion, moderated by Professor Iain Stewart MBE. The Prince of Wales will make the opening and closing remarks. 

The Royal Scientific Society, a non-governmental organisation established in 1970, is the largest applied research institution, consultancy, and technical support service provider in Jordan and is a regional leader in the fields of science and technology. HRH Princess Sumaya bint El Hassan is the President of RSS and she is a key advocate for science and technology initiatives in Jordan. 

The roundtable discussion will be moderated by Professor Iain Stewart MBE. Professor Stewart is El Hassan Research Chair in Sustainability (EHRCS) at the Royal Scientific Society. The Jordan–UK EHRCS is a joint initiative which aims to enhance the research and innovation capacity of Jordan for long-term sustainable development and is supported by the Newton-Khalidi Fund. 

HRH Princess Sumaya bint El Hassan and the RSS play a prominent role in the UK-Jordan Science and Innovation partnership, including as part of the Newton-Khalidi Fund steering committee. The Newton-Khalidi Fund, a UK Aid initiative managed by the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy, was launched in Jordan in 2017 at the World Science Forum which was itself organised by the RSS under the patronage of His Majesty the King of Jordan. 

ENGAGEMENT 11

The Prince of Wales will host a Prince’s Trust International (PTI) reception at the British Ambassador’s Residence, Amman 

His Royal Highness will join around 40 partners and beneficiaries of programmes run by the Prince’s Trust International in Jordan at the Ambassador’s Residence. Will Straw (CEO of Prince’s Trust International), Mr Summer Xia (Director of the British Council in Jordan), and Hugh Cleary, (1st Secretary) will also be present. 

Mr Straw will introduce His Royal Highness to some of those present, including young people who have participated in the Prince’s Trust International’s two projects in Jordan: Enterprise Business Challenge and Tariqi, the local name for the “Get Into” programme. 

The Ambassador will also say a few words, followed by Sara (23) from Amman, a beneficiary of PTI’s ‘Get Into’ job placement programme. 

After this, The Prince will present certificates to other young people present – winners of a climate change art competition run by the British Council in Jordan, having viewed some of the winning entries at the event. 

Since the Prince’s Trust International launched programmes in Jordan in 2015, they have empowered over 11,000 young people with education, skills training and work experience. In partnership with the King Abdullah II Fund for Development (KAFD), Business Development Center (BDC), Loyac and INJAZ, the programmes aim to identify gaps in local youth provision and assess how employability programmes can continue to support young people into work in Jordan. 

The PTI’s Enterprise Challenge programme encourages students to explore, demonstrate and develop their understanding of markets and business strategies. The programme is delivered over the course of about 3 months as an annual national competition that introduces young people aged 13-16 to business entrepreneurship concepts and the best practices in ethical-business strategy development. 

Tariqi is based on the Prince’s Trust’s flagship employability programme “Get Into”. Tariqi supports 18-27 year-old young people, who are not in education or employment move into a sustainable and desirable employment. The course aims to build up a young person’s skill set, improve their communication skills, and boost their confidence, ultimately leading them into paid employment. 

As part of the embassy’s programme of marking the centenary of the PTI’s relationship with Jordan, the British Council has run an art competition for young Jordanians, in three age groups, to contribute a photograph, drawing or painting on the theme of Climate Change. 

ENGAGEMENT 12

The Prince of Wales and The Duchess of Cornwall will attend a Centenary Celebration at the Jordan Museum 

Their Royal Highnesses will be greeted next to the Hejaz railway carriage by Bridget Brind, Her Majesty’s Ambassador to Jordan. Their Royal Highnesses will walk to the entrance lined by the Jordanian Royal Guard and will be greeted in the main courtyard with a short musical performance from the Mahali Musical Production. The Prince will then give a keynote speech on the theme of the centenary. Their Royal Highnesses will circulate and meet the different attending groups before proceeding into the Museum’s main atrium where the Rejuvenation and Modernisation of Extinct Arts and Crafts (RMEAC) pop-up art exhibition is positioned. Their Royal Highnesses will then view the Dead Sea scrolls exhibit. 

The Jordan Museum was built in 2014 and is located in the old city at the heart of Amman, only a street away from major archaeological sites such as the Roman theatre, Nymphaeum and Amman Citadel. The venue has suitable historic and contemporary links with the UK from a display of the Hejaz railway to links with the University of Bradford through the Newton Khalidi development fund. The Museum serves as a comprehensive national centre for learning and knowledge reflecting Jordan’s rich history and culture. It includes an exhibit of a small number of the Dead Sea scrolls and the 7500 BC ‘Ain Ghazal statues which are regarded as some of the oldest human statues ever made by human civilization. 

Mahali is a music collaborative project which is supported by the British Council to empower the new generation of artists. The project focuses on providing an opportunity to musicians aged 18-35 residing in Jordan with a focus on including participants of other nationalities such as Palestinians, Syrians, Sudanese, Yemeni and others. 

RMEAC is a project the British Council is supporting through the Masarat Grants Scheme which has been launched to support artists and creatives following the Covid-19 pandemic. 

The project focuses on creating products in trades that are either extinct, underdeveloped and/or forgotten by conducting research into the history and inheritance of old professions and traditional crafts in Jordan. 

The Prince of Wales and Duchess of Cornwall Arrive in Jordan – Day 1
The Prince of Wales and Duchess of Cornwall Explore Umm Qais, Jordan – Day 2
The Prince of Wales and Duchess of Cornwall Arrive in Egypt – Day 3
The Prince of Wales and Duchess of Cornwall Visit Cairo – Day 4

The Prince of Wales and Duchess of Cornwall Arrive in Jordan

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The Prince of Wales and The Duchess of Cornwall during a visit to the Great Sphinx of Giza, on the third day of their tour of the Middle East. November, 2021.
The Prince of Wales and The Duchess of Cornwall during a visit to the Great Sphinx of Giza, on the third day of their tour of the Middle East. November, 2021.

THE PRINCE OF WALES AND THE DUCHESS OF CORNWALL VISIT THE HASHEMITE KINGDOM OF JORDAN AND THE ARAB REPUBLIC OF EGYPT

Tuesday 16th November

Engagement 1

The Prince of Wales and the Duchess of Cornwall will arrive at Queen Alia International Airport Amman, Jordan.

Their Royal Highnesses will be greeted by Her Majesty’s Ambassador, Bridget Brind; FCDO Director MENAD, Stephanie Al-Qaq; the Defence Senior Advisor to the Middle East, Air Marshal Sammy Sampson; the Amman Deputy Head of Mission, Richard Moon; and the Defence Attaché, Brigadier Jamie Piggott.

Engagement 2

The Prince of Wales and the Duchess of Cornwall will arrive at Al Husseiniya Palace for a formal welcome with His Majesty King Abdullah II and Her Majesty Queen Rania.

On arrival at Al-Husseiniya Palace, the Prince of Wales and the Duchess of Cornwall will be greeted by an honour guard of Jordanian troops. Their Royal Highnesses will then be welcomed by His Majesty King Abdullah II and Her Majesty Queen Rania.The King and Queen will escort the Prince of Wales and the Duchess of Cornwall inside the palace, through an inner courtyard where there will be an honour guard of the historic Circassian Royal Guard.

Their Royal Highnesses will enter a private diwan within the palace where photographs will be taken, before His Royal Highness undertakes a private bilateral meeting with His Majesty.

Al-Husseinya Palace, on the western edge of Amman, was built in 2006. The palace includes the offices of His Majesty King Abdullah II Bin Al-Hussein, the office of Her Majesty Queen Rania Al Abdullah, and the office of His Highness Prince Al-Hussein bin Abdullah II, Crown Prince.

Engagement 3

The Duchess of Cornwall will visit the Queen Rania Family and Children Centre (QRFCC) with Her Majesty Queen Rania.FormatHer Royal Highness and Her Majesty Queen Rania will be greeted at the main entrance by Ms Enaam Basrrishi, Director General of the Jordan River Foundation (JRF), Angela Spilsbury, Development Director, British Embassy Amman and other dignitaries.

Her Royal Highness and Her Majesty will be escorted into the Little Home area (“Beit Zgheer” in Arabic) which aims to increase knowledge and awareness of key concepts to help protect children from abuse. Her Royal Highness will meet local children (aged 7-9) and see the activities taking place in the six different zones including the kitchen zone.

They will then see the Youth Space where they will meet adolescent girls (aged 12-14) receiving a ‘life skills’ lesson on building self-esteem and assertiveness.

In the main courtyard, they will view a range of handmade items celebrating the traditional and contemporary arts of rural and nomadic Jordan, created by female artisans from local communities for the Jordan River Foundation showroom. Including a collaboration between JRF and Ikea. This is part of a long-term partnership to create jobs and increase economic inclusion for Jordanian and Syrian women. The products are sold by Ikea worldwide generating sustained employment and prosperity.

Her Royal Highness will also meet local women employed by JRF and see a loom demonstration before visiting the Art Room where an art therapy session for women will be taking place. Some of the women are survivors of Gender Based Violence. Her Royal Highness will also make a hand out of clay which will be gifted to the QRFCC.

Engagement 4

The Prince of Wales and the Duchess of Cornwall will visit Elijah’s Hill and the baptismal site of Jesus Christ, Juwafat al-Kafrayn, before joining an interfaith discussion.

Their Royal Highnesses will be greeted at Elijah’s Hill by HRH Prince Ghazi bin Muhammad and the King’s Senior Adviser for Religious and Cultural Affairs and The Director General of the Baptism Site, Rustom Mkhjian.

Their Royal Highnesses, accompanied by Prince Ghazi, will walk around the base of Elijah’s Hill, where it is believed that Elijah ascended to heaven in the 9th century BC, and see the excavations around the cave where John the Baptist lived, taking in the wilderness across to the River Jordan. Their Royal Highnesses will also see the remains of a 5th-century church, next to the cave, the first monastery east of the Jordan River on the early Christian pilgrimage route between Jerusalem and Bethlehem to the west and Mount Nebo to the east.

Their Royal Highnesses will then travel across to the baptism site where they will walk down the steps to the riverbed where Christ was baptised. Their Royal Highnesses will have an opportunity to touch the water. The Prince of Wales, with Prince Ghazi, will proceed on foot to a tented area where His Royal Highness will be introduced to a group of interfaith leaders. The discussion will be around ‘environment and interfaith’.

Engagement 5

The Prince of Wales and the Duchess of Cornwall will attend an official dinner with His Majesty King Abdullah II and Her Majesty Queen Rania at Al Husseiniya Palace.

The Prince of Wales and Duchess of Cornwall Arrive in Jordan – Day 1
The Prince of Wales and Duchess of Cornwall Explore Umm Qais, Jordan – Day 2
The Prince of Wales and Duchess of Cornwall Arrive in Egypt – Day 3
The Prince of Wales and Duchess of Cornwall Visit Cairo – Day 4

The Duke of Cambridge to Celebrate Leading Conservationists

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Duke of Cambridge to Attend Tusk Gala
The Duke of Cambridge presents the first Tusk Conservation Award at the inaugural Tusk Conservation Awards at the Royal Society, London.

THE DUKE OF CAMBRIDGE WILL CELEBRATE LEADING CONSERVATIONISTS AT THE TUSK AWARDS

London

Monday, 22nd November 2021

The Duke of Cambridge will celebrate Africa’s leading wildlife protectors and present the winners of the annual Tusk Conservation Awards at a ceremony to be held later this month.

Launched with Prince William in 2013, the awards celebrate the work of leading conservationists in Africa. The ceremony will return this year as a face-to-face event at the BFI Southbank in London after last year’s ceremony had to be held virtually. It will be hosted by Kate Silverton.

During the ceremony, the Duke will present each of the winners with their awards, before making a short speech. Following the awards presentation, the Duke will attend a reception with key members and supporters of Tusk Trust, as well as the winners of this years’ awards to hear more about their vital work on the frontline of conservation efforts in Africa.

As Royal Patron of Tusk Trust, Prince William has long been a supporter of the charity’s efforts and has taken part in their annual awards several times. For last year’s virtual ceremony, he recorded a video message congratulating the winners.

The Duke of Cambridge to Attend The Royal Foundation’s Emergency Services Mental Health Symposium

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The Duke of Cambridge speaks with Ravi Saini (left) and RNLI crew during a visit to meet emergency responders and members of the public who received their life-saving support at Dockhead Fire Station to mark Emergency Services Day (999 Day). September, 2021.

THE DUKE OF CAMBRIDGE WILL ATTEND THE ROYAL FOUNDATION EMERGENCY SERVICES MENTAL HEALTH SYMPOSIUM AND ANNOUNCE BLUE LIGHT TOGETHER MENTAL HEALTH SUPPORT PACKAGE

London

Thursday, 25th November 2021

The Duke of Cambridge will attend The Royal Foundation’s Emergency Services Mental Health Symposium in London on Thursday 25th November. The event will be the first time that senior leaders from the emergency services from across all four nations will come together to address the mental health of their workforces.

During the symposium, the Duke will announce the ambitious Blue Light Together package of mental health support for the emergency services, developed by The Royal Foundation and partner organisations.

Hosted in partnership with the National Police Chiefs’ Council, National Fire Chiefs Council, Association of Ambulance Chief Executives and United Kingdom Search and Rescue, the symposium will bring together emergency service leaders, frontline workers, policy makers and academics. It will include a live panel session involving senior emergency services leaders who will talk about their personal experience of mental health, alongside keynote speeches by Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police, Dame Cressida Dick, and the Duke of Cambridge.

Supporting the mental health and wellbeing of the emergency services community is an important priority for the Duke of Cambridge and The Royal Foundation. Having witnessed first-hand the unique challenges this community faces on a daily basis through his roles as both an Air Ambulance and RAF Search and Rescue pilot, the Duke is uniquely placed to act on this issue.

His Royal Highness convened an Emergency Responder Senior Leaders Board in response to research commissioned by The Royal Foundation in 2018, conducted by King’s College London and the Open University, which identified a need for greater sharing of ‘better practice’ across the emergency services sector to best support the mental health of its workforces.

The Duke has been working closely with the Emergency Responder Senior Leaders Board and charity partners, informed by this research. Together, they have been working to identify solutions and best practice to ensure that emergency responders and their families can access the advice and support relevant to the unique challenges they face, including providing immediate support to front line charities during the Covid-19 pandemic.

The symposium will provide an opportunity to present Blue Light Together to senior emergency services leaders, with further details of this ambitious package of mental health support for our emergency responders to be announced at the event.


Speaking With Emergency Responders on Mental Health and Support

In this personal conversation, which was recorded last week, The Duke, Will and Chloe share their experiences of working as emergency responders and the mental health impact that this can have. They also discuss coping mechanisms and the need for emergency responders to be given the tools and support to be able to cope.

The film will be played at the Symposium, which will see 200 leaders from across fire, ambulance, police, and search and rescue from all four nations come together for the first time to address the mental health of their workforces.

The Prince of Wales to Meet Prince’s Trust Young Entrepreneurs

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The Prince of Wales during a visit to Bangor Market where he walked around and meeting stall holders at the open-air market, May , 2021.

THE PRINCE OF WALES MEETS PRINCE’S TRUST YOUNG ENTREPRENEURS AT THE BRIXTON NATWEST BRANCH 

Thursday 11th November 2021 

The Prince of Wales, President of the Prince’s Trust, will meet Prince’s Trust Young Entrepreneurs supported through the Enterprise programme at the Brixton NatWest Branch.

The Prince of Wales will be greeted on arrival by Deputy Lieutenant of Greater London, Ms Rosi Prescott. 

His Royal Highness will then be introduced to Lambeth Council Members alongside Branch Manager Brixton NatWest, Mr Kemal Kemal, Director of Corporate and Government Partnerships of The Prince’s Trust, Mr Benjamin Marson and Chief Executive of NatWest, Mrs Alison Rose. 

Accompanied by Mr Marson and Mrs Rose, His Royal Highness will then meet with 

young people who will showcase and tell The Prince of their business success stories. 

His Royal Highness will proceed on to thank senior NatWest leaders and a number of key stakeholders for their unwavering support of The Prince’s Trust programmes. 

Finally, The Prince will join a private roundtable on the first floor with young people. 

NatWest staff will line the departure route. 

The Prince last visited Brixton with The Duchess of Cornwall in February 2017. 

NatWest has donated to the Prince’s Trust since 1976 and been partnered formally with the Prince’s Trust for over twenty years. 

Since 2009, NatWest has helped fund almost seven and a half thousand young people to take part in the “Enterprise” programme. 

The Enterprise Relief Fund was an emergency fund set up by your Trust and NatWest during the pandemic in 2020. The fund provided emergency grants to young people under thirty who were self-employed and ran a business but did not qualify for government support. A total of £3.7 million in grants were awarded. An additional 351 young people have received a grant funded by NatWest through the “Enterprise” programme. 

In the past three years, 754 NatWest staff have volunteered with the Trust, supporting over 2,618 young people across a number of programmes including “Enterprise”, “Team” and “Achieve”. 

Royal Family to Attend Annual Royal British Legion Festival of Remembrance

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Queen Elizabeth II (centre) with members of the royal family attend the annual Royal British Legion Festival of Remembrance at the Royal Albert Hall in Kensington, London.

THE PRINCE OF WALES AND THE DUCHESS OF CORNWALL AND MEMBERS OF THE ROYAL FAMILY WILL ATTEND THE ROYAL BRITISH LEGION FESTIVAL OF REMEMBRANCE AT THE ROYAL ALBERT HALL 

Saturday, 13th November 2021 

The Prince of Wales and The Duchess of Cornwall, accompanied by Members of the Royal Family, will attend the annual Royal British Legion Festival of Remembrance at the Royal Albert Hall. 

The Festival honours the Armed Forces community for their service and sacrifice in defending our freedoms and way of life and commemorates all those who have lost their lives in conflicts. This year’s event marks the centenary of the Royal British Legion and reflects on the different ways the charity has supported the Armed Forces community. The Festival will also commemorate 100 years of the poppy as the symbol of remembrance. 

The 30th anniversary of Operation Granby, the largest deployment of UK Forces since the Second World War, will be remembered, and the programme will pay tribute to currently serving members of the Armed Forces who were deployed to Afghanistan as part of Operation Pitting. 

The Royal Party will be received by Mr Ian McCulloch, President of the Royal Albert Hall and Lieutenant General James Bashall, President of the Royal British Legion. 

Members of the Royal Family who will be attending this year include: 

The Prince of Wales and The Duchess of Cornwall 

The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge 

The Earl and Countess of Wessex 

The Princess Royal and Vice Admiral Sir Tim Laurence 

The Duke and Duchess of Gloucester 

The Duke of Kent 

Princess Alexandra 

The Festival will be broadcast on BBC One at 9pm on Saturday 13th November. 

To find out more, please visit http://www.britishlegion.org.uk/ 

The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge to Attend the Royal Variety Performance

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The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge attending the 72nd British Academy Film Awards held at the Royal Albert Hall, Kensington Gore, Kensington, London.

THE DUKE AND DUCHESS OF CAMBRIDGE WILL ATTEND THE ROYAL VARIETY PERFORMANCE

Royal Albert Hall, London

Thursday 18th November, 2021

The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge will attend the Royal Variety Performance at the Royal Albert Hall on Thursday 18th November.

The Royal Variety Performance takes place every year, either in London or in a theatre around the United Kingdom. The event is in aid of the Royal Variety Charity, of which Her Majesty The Queen is patron. The money raised from the show helps hundreds of entertainers throughout the UK, who need help and assistance as a result of old age, ill-health, or hard times. This year sees the centenary of the reigning monarch being patron, commencing with King George V in 1921.

The evening will be hosted by Alan Carr and will include performances from Ed Sheeran, Sir Rod Stewart, the cast of Matilda The Musical, Anne Marie, Years and Years, the cast of Cirque du Soleil, James Blunt, the cast of Moulin Rouge The Musical and Germany’s The Messoudi Brothers. The evening will also feature performances from Gregory Porter and Elvis Costello, as well as a special collaboration by actress Keala Settle and the Some Voices choir.

In 2021, the Royal Variety Charity has continued to support members of the entertainment industry with its own nationwide grants scheme, assisting many people who have found this past year a particularly difficult one. The Royal Variety Charity also continues to manage its own care home, Brinsworth House in Twickenham. The nursing and care staff have ensured that the home remains a place of safety, peace, and happiness for retired members of the entertainment industry. The residents are now back showing off their own theatrical skills and even producing and performing their own stage shows.

On the night, Their Royal Highnesses will meet a number of performers as well as Royal Variety Charity and ITV executives before and after the show.

The Duke of Cambridge to Visit Microsoft HQ

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The Duke of Cambridge giving his keynote speech at the 2018 Illegal Wildlife Trade Conference, Battersea Evolution, London.

THE DUKE OF CAMBRIDGE WILL VISIT MICROSOFT HEADQUARTERS TO LEARN HOW NEW TECHNOLOGY IS DISRUPTING THE ILLEGAL WILDLIFE TRADE

Reading, Berkshire

Thursday 18th November 2021

The Duke of Cambridge, founder of The Royal Foundation’s United for Wildlife, will visit Microsoft HQ to learn how a new state of the art AI scanning technology can increase detection of illegal wildlife products being trafficked through international airports, and help to disrupt this criminal trade.

Following a recent trial at London Heathrow, Microsoft’s AI research project, SEEKER, proved its ability to detect illegal wildlife items concealed in baggage and cargo, capabilities lacking in current airport screening and security systems.

The Duke will hear about the potential of this technology as part of his work with The Royal Foundation’s United for Wildlife. The illegal wildlife trade is among the five most lucrative globalcrimes and is often run by highly organised criminal networks. United for Wildlife aims to make it impossible for traffickers to transport, finance or profit from illegal wildlife products. By working collaboratively with the transport and finance sectors, building key partnerships with NGOs, and sharing information and best practices across the sectors, and across borders, United for Wildlife is disrupting this criminal network globally.

During the visit, the Duke will follow a poaching case from end to end to show how United for Wildlife partners are helping to disrupt this criminal network at each stage. He will first hear from Rangers at the Southern Africa Wildlife College about the latest situation on the ground there, where nearly 400 rhinos are poached each year. He will then hear from UK Border Force officials how criminals aim to exploit the transport network to move their product around the globe and the detection and data collection challenges facing enforcement teams and how SEEKER can help to solve some of these.

SEEKER has a proven successful detection rate of over 70% on ivory products, but importantly it can be trained on any species and integrated into current airport screening and scanning infrastructure. SEEKER can build intelligence for global enforcement teams to better see what is being trafficked, where it has come from and where it is going. Reporting of illegal wildlife seizure cases has, to date, happened without robust data. With a better understanding of criminal tactics and illegal trade patterns, built on the kind of data provided by SEEKER, private and public sector organisations and enforcement agencies can take more informed action.

His Royal Highness will then move to the boardroom to hear from United for Wildlife Financial Taskforce partners and the South African Anti-Money Laundering Integrated Task Force how seizures at airports are just the start of a complex financial investigation. Experts can follow the money trail to identify the criminals at the top of the pyramid and prosecute under anti-money laundering legislation which often has more severe penalties that wildlife crime regulation.

United for Wildlife was founded by Prince William and The Royal Foundation in 2014 with the aim to leave our planet in a stronger position for the next generation by protecting endangered species and their habitats from the Illegal Wildlife Trade. Since the formation of the Finance and Transport Taskforces, they have grown from 12 private sector companies to over 170, representing large proportions of the global shipping, airline, and financial industries. The taskforces have trained 85,000 employees, supported over 288 law investigations, contributed to 124 trafficker arrests.

Duchess of Cornwall Joins ‘Poetry Together’ Tea Party

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The Duchess of Cornwall talks to school children as they hold a model of an albatross during a visit to Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum in Glasgow to celebrate its 120th anniversary, September, 2021.
The Duchess of Cornwall talks to school children as they hold a model of an albatross during a visit to Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum in Glasgow to celebrate its 120th anniversary, September, 2021.

 THE DUCHESS OF CORNWALL WILL JOIN CHILDREN AND CARE HOME RESIDENTS FOR A ‘POETRY TOGETHER’ TEA PARTY 

Wednesday 10th November 2021 

The Duchess of Cornwall will join children and care home residents for a ‘Poetry Together’ recital and tea party at the Royal Geographical Society.

The Poetry Together initiative was launched by Gyles Brandreth in 2019 in partnership with Dukes Education and National Poetry Day. Across the UK, from Belfast to Great Yarmouth, Glasgow to Cornwall, more than 150 schools and care homes have signed up for the event which began on National Poetry Day, 7th October 2021. 

Having signed up to the scheme, pupils and care home residents are brought together to learn the same poem for their ‘Poetry Together’ tea party, during which they will recite the poem together before sitting down to share a cup of tea and a slice of cake. 

Having supported the initiative since its launch in 2019, The Duchess of Cornwall shared her personal recipe for a Victoria Sponge in September earlier this year for the Poetry Together tea parties. This year’s events will be particularly special as care home residents and school children will be able to convene in person once again following last year’s event being forced online due to the pandemic. 

In 2019, The Duchess attended the inaugural Poetry Together event at Eaton Square Upper School, where Her Royal Highness recited an extract from the poem ‘Matilda’ by heart herself. 

The Duchess is a passionate promoter of Literacy in the UK and internationally, with particular focus on encouraging a love of reading and writing from an early age. Another of Her Royal Highness’s key focuses is supporting the older generation –encouraging them to stay active, and to feel valued and independent, tackling the isolation and seclusion that many older people face. 

The Prince of Wales to Host Reception for Recipients of The Queen’s Awards

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THE PRINCE OF WALES WILL HOST A RECEPTION FOR WINNERS OF THE QUEEN’S AWARDS FOR ENTERPRISE AT WINDSOR CASTLE 

WEDNESDAY 10TH NOVEMBER 2021

The Prince of Wales will host a reception for recipients of The Queen’s Awards for Enterprise at Windsor Castle. The reception will also be attended by The Princess Royal, The Countess of Wessex, The Duke of Kent, The Duke and Duchess of Gloucester and Princess Alexandra.

The Prince of Wales will meet with a range of diverse winners from across the UK in the fields of international trade, innovation, sustainable development and social mobility. The reception will host winners from 2020 and 2021. 

Now in its 56th year, the Queen’s Awards for Enterprise is the most prestigious business awards in the country, with winners recognised as being among the best in the country and able to use the Queen’s Awards emblem for the next 5 years. A total of 205 businesses this year and 220 businesses last year were recognised for their contribution in 4 categories: 

  • international trade 
  • innovation 
  • sustainable development 
  • promoting opportunity (through social mobility) 

Winners include businesses leading the way in a broad range of industries – from agricultural technology and sustainable goods production, to innovative software and healthcare. 

History of the Award 

Instituted by Royal Warrant in 1965, the Queen’s Awards to Industry scheme was recommended by a committee chaired by HRH The Duke of Edinburgh, and the first Awards were made in 1966. 

In 1975, recommendations of a review which The Duke also chaired led to the scheme becoming the Queen’s Awards for Export and Technology, with separate Awards for outstanding achievement in each field. An Environmental Achievement Award was created in 1992. 

Following a review in 1999, led by HRH The Prince of Wales, the scheme became the Queen’s Awards for Enterprise, creating three of the four categories that still exist today: Innovation, International Trade, and Sustainable Development. 

In 2005, the Enterprise Promotion Award was created to recognise individuals who played an outstanding role in promoting entrepreneurial skills and attitudes. 

A new category, Promoting Opportunity (through social mobility) was introduced in 2016 and the first winners were announced in 2017. 

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