Britain's King Charles Meets Cheering Australian Crowds, Says 'Great Joy' to Return

Britain's King Charles and Queen Camilla attend Church on a tour of Australia St Thomas' Anglican Church, North Sydney, Australia, October 20, 2024. Ian Vogler/Pool via REUTERS
Britain's King Charles and Queen Camilla attend Church on a tour of Australia St Thomas' Anglican Church, North Sydney, Australia, October 20, 2024. Ian Vogler/Pool via REUTERS
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Britain's King Charles Meets Cheering Australian Crowds, Says 'Great Joy' to Return

Britain's King Charles and Queen Camilla attend Church on a tour of Australia St Thomas' Anglican Church, North Sydney, Australia, October 20, 2024. Ian Vogler/Pool via REUTERS
Britain's King Charles and Queen Camilla attend Church on a tour of Australia St Thomas' Anglican Church, North Sydney, Australia, October 20, 2024. Ian Vogler/Pool via REUTERS

Hundreds of well-wishers greeted Britain's King Charles and Queen Camilla in Sydney on Sunday as the royal couple attended church, with the king saying it was a "great joy" to return to Australia in his first visit to an overseas realm as sovereign.

Charles' 16th official visit to Australia, where he attended school for six months as a teenager in 1966, is also his first major foreign trip since being diagnosed with cancer, according to Reuters.

"What a great joy it is to come to Australia for the first time as sovereign and to renew a love of this country and its people which I have cherished for so long," he said in a speech at the New South Wales parliament.

New South Wales state lawmaker Kellie Sloane, whose electorate covers some of Sydney's most famous beaches, wrote on social media platform X after chatting with the king that he "sends his best to the 'amazing' surf clubs at Bondi Beach".

The royal couple were earlier greeted at St Thomas' Anglican Church by the archbishop of Sydney, Kanishka Raffel, and children from the church's Sunday school who waved Australian flags.

Camilla was given a flower bouquet by the minister's wife, Ellie Mantle, who asked if they had recovered from jet lag after the long flight to Australia on Friday. "Sort of," Camilla replied.

Inside the church, Charles and Camilla signed two bibles, including one that belonged to Australia's first minister and chaplain of the First Fleet of ships that took convicts from Britain to the penal colony of Australia in 1788.

Outside, the royal couple shook hands and chatted with a large crowd of cheering fans, some singing "God Save the King".

It was the public's first opportunity to meet Charles and Camilla since they arrived in Australia's biggest city on Friday night, and several hundred well wishers outnumbered a dozen protesters.

Travelling across Sydney Harbour, Charles visited the New South Wales parliament, marking the 200th anniversary of Australia's oldest legislature.

The king presented the lawmakers with an hour-glass to time their speeches, and highlighted the fundamental role of strong parliaments to democracies that serve today's diverse societies.

"Democracy has, I believe, an extraordinary capacity for innovation, compromise and adaptability as well as stability," he said.

The royal couple will travel to Canberra on Monday to meet Prime Minister Anthony Albanese at the national parliament and visit the Australian War Memorial.

Albanese met the couple on Friday at Admiralty House, the historic government harbourside residence where they are staying, for what he said was an informal drink and chat.

The king will attend the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting in Samoa after the six-day Australia tour.

Charles had made a significant personal donation to create a skills program to tackle climate change and boost higher education in small island states, including the Pacific Islands, the Association of Commonwealth Universities said on Sunday.

Mid-career professionals and civil servants will benefit from the fellowships, in a program that aims to retain talent in small island states and bolster resilience to the impacts of climate change such as rising sea levels.



A Chilean Cyclist and His Dog Get Caught up in the Israel-Iran War

Damage inside a building after a recent Israeli airstrike, in Tehran, Iran, 25 June 2025, during a US-mediated ceasefire between Iran and Israel that started on 24 June. (EPA)
Damage inside a building after a recent Israeli airstrike, in Tehran, Iran, 25 June 2025, during a US-mediated ceasefire between Iran and Israel that started on 24 June. (EPA)
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A Chilean Cyclist and His Dog Get Caught up in the Israel-Iran War

Damage inside a building after a recent Israeli airstrike, in Tehran, Iran, 25 June 2025, during a US-mediated ceasefire between Iran and Israel that started on 24 June. (EPA)
Damage inside a building after a recent Israeli airstrike, in Tehran, Iran, 25 June 2025, during a US-mediated ceasefire between Iran and Israel that started on 24 June. (EPA)

Diego Haro, a Chilean traveler from one of the world's southernmost towns, never thought biking across Iran with his dog Mirlo would be easy.

For all the World Heritage sites, street skewers and breathtaking scenery, there were plenty of downsides to expect if recent years were any guide, including Iranian security forces' increasingly frequent arrests of foreigner tourists and dual nationals on suspicion of espionage and other offenses.

Haro, 31, from Chile's remote Punta Arenas, had already biked across 20 countries from Bolivia to Armenia in the last two years. But he said he never imagined that his journey would involve sheltering from Israeli airstrikes that plunged the regional foes into 12 days of open warfare this month.

A shaky ceasefire has held since Tuesday.

"Traveling is generally a constant source of uncertainty," he told The Associated Press in a video call from Yüksekova, in eastern Türkiye.

He fled across the border to Türkiye last Sunday with Mirlo, his 3-year-old mixed breed, seeking safety as Israeli attacks ground on.

"There are things that you don't think will happen, but they do," he said.

Haro had been traveling in the northern Kurdistan province for around six weeks, sleeping in tents in the countryside or depending on the hospitality of strangers, when, on June 13, Israeli warplanes crossed into Iranian airspace and suddenly struck the country's military and nuclear sites.

Having never experienced war, the Chilean recalled his fear as explosions lit up the night sky. "Every night there were explosions," he said. "Mirlo was super scared too."

Iran on Tuesday put the death toll in Iran at 606, with 5,332 people wounded, though their casualty figures in the past have downplayed losses. The Washington-based Human Rights Activists group released figures Wednesday suggesting Israeli strikes on Iran had killed at least 1,054 and wounded 4,476. In Israel, at least 28 people were killed and more than 1,000 wounded in the war.

Tehran emptied out as the Israeli military issued evacuation orders and Haro scrambled to revise his original plan of reaching the Iranian capital.

"The only goal I had in mind was to try to get out of Iran as soon as possible," he said.

Since June 13, flights into and out of Iran have been suspended. In hopes of crossing the border on foot, he turned back and headed for Türkiye, cycling over 400 kilometers (250 miles) to reach Urmia, in Iran's northeast.

As Iranian authorities began to grasp the extent of the war's damage to their security and military apparatus, paranoia grew over apparent Israeli infiltration. Over 50 people were arrested on suspicion of ties to Israel and charged with "operating drones to film public and strategic sites," the semiofficial Fars and Tasnim news agencies reported.

Haro said he felt he was being watched. One night last week, six gunmen pulled up in an unlicensed vehicle next to him, forced him to get inside and blindfolded him as they took his passport and drove around asking him questions until dawn about why he was in the country, he said. They did not identify themselves, he added.

He struggled to explain his worldwide bike tour with his dog as none of them understood English, let alone Spanish. The next afternoon, he got his passport back and was granted permission to leave.

Iran's mission to the United Nations did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Haro's brief detention.

The first thing he did after crossing to Türkiye with Mirlo was buy a SIM card and call his mother, he recalled.

Iran’s government imposed a nationwide internet shutdown and he hadn't spoken with any friends or family in over five days.

"My mom couldn’t stop crying," he said.