William-Harry to walk behind Queen’s coffin

London, Sep 14 (Representative) Prince William and Prince Harry will walk together behind the Queen’s coffin in a procession in London on Wednesday. The brothers, along with the King, will follow the coffin on foot from Buckingham Palace to Westminster Hall, where the Queen will lie in state. The procession will leave the palace at 2.22 pm (local time) and is expected to arrive at Westminster Hall by 3 pm. A service lasting about 20 minutes will then be led by the Archbishop of Canterbury, the BBC reported. The King’s three siblings – Princess Anne, Prince Andrew, and Prince Edward – will also walk in the procession.

Camilla, the Queen Consort, and Catherine, the Princess of Wales, will travel by car, as will Sophie, the Countess of Wessex, and Meghan, the Duchess of Sussex. The joint royal sibling appearance comes after on Saturday Prince William and Prince Harry, accompanied by their wives, appeared in front of crowds gathered outside Windsor Castle. The group arrived in the same car and spent around 40 minutes greeting mourners and looking at flowers left for their grandmother. It was the first time the brothers had been seen alongside one another in public since the funeral of their grandfather, the Duke of Edinburgh, in April last year.

Both were at a service of thanksgiving in St Paul’s Cathedral during the Platinum Jubilee celebrations in June, but sat on opposite sides of the cathedral. The King spoke warmly of Harry and Meghan in his televised address to the nation on Friday evening. After announcing that William and Kate would become Prince and Princess of Wales, he said: “I want also to express my love for Harry and Meghan as they continue to build their lives overseas.” In a tribute to the Queen released on Monday, Harry also said he wanted to “honour my father in his new role as King Charles III”. Mourners have already begun queuing to attend the Queen’s lying-in-state at Westminster Hall. It starts at 5 pm on Wednesday and concludes at 6.30 am on Monday the Queen’s funeral, the BBC said.