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Lidia Thorpe says royal family has Indigenous ‘bones and skulls’ – Royal family live

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King Charles told ‘give us our land back’ by Australian senator

The Indigenous senator who confronted King Charles has spoken out once more to claim that the “bones and skulls” of Aboriginal people are still in possession of the royal family.

Senator Lidia Thorpe told the monarch “you are not my king” and demanded a treaty between Australia‘s First Nations and its government on Monday.

She waited until the end of his speech at Australia’s Parliament House to say a “genocide” had been committed against the Commonwealth country’s indigenous people.

The independent politician has now said that as the current King, Charles should “answer for” the “thousands of massacre sites” in Australia.

She told Sky News hours after her appearance at parliament: “We have our bones and our skulls still in his possession – or in his family’s possession. We want that back.

“We want our land back and we want your King to take some leadership and sit at the table and discuss a treaty with us.”

Charles and Camilla have faced low-key protests during their tour of Australia from supporters of First Nations resistance to colonisation, who have been displaying a banner with the word “decolonise” at a number of events.

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Lidia Thorpe says royal family still has Indigenous ‘bones and skulls’

The Indigenous senator who confronted King Charles has spoken out once more to claim that the “bones and skulls” of Aboriginal people are still in possession of the royal family.

She told Sky News hours after her appearance at parliament: “We have our bones and our skulls still in his possession, or in his family’s possession. We want that back.

“We want our land back and we want your King to take some leadership and sit at the table and discuss a treaty with us.”

(Getty Images)

Athena Stavrou21 October 2024 10:18

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Senator explains “genocidalist” claims

Lidia Thorpe, the Indigenous Australian senator who confronted the King, has explained why she called him a “genocidalist”.

She told SkyNews: “There’s thousands of massacre sites in this country from invasion and someone needs to answer for it. He is the successor then he needs to answer.”

She went on to say: “We are the real sovereigns in the country. The King is not our sovereign. The King lives in your country [the UK]. He’s from your country he can’t be our King.

“I have the support of Aboriginal people around this country. I have the support from my grandmother, I have the support from elders around the country.”

Athena Stavrou21 October 2024 10:02

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Senator Thorpe confronted the King for ‘truth-telling’

Senator Lidia Thorpe is now speaking after confronting King Charles during his royal reception in Australia’s parliament.

After his speech, Ms Thorpe approached Charles and told him: “You are not my King”.

She is now speaking to Sky News about her decision to challenge the monarch.

“I did it for truth telling,” she told SkyNews. “Global-truth telling about the royals who caused so much devastation to not only people in this country but indigenous people around the world.”

(Sky News)

Athena Stavrou21 October 2024 09:53

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Charles and Camilla visit Botanic Gardens after parliamentary address

King Charles and Queen Camilla visited the Australian National Botanic Gardens on Monday after being confronted during their reception at the country’s parliament.

On the second day of their royal visit to Australia, the couple met members of the public as they also visited the National Bushfire Behaviour Research Laboratory on their visit to Canberra.

(Chris Jackson/PA Wire)

Athena Stavrou21 October 2024 09:26

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Australian senator condemns Lidia Thorpe’s comments

Lidia Thorpe’s colleagues have responded to her confrontation of King Charles during his visit to the country’s parliament.

Senator Ralph Babet took to social media to condemn Ms Thorpe’s comments, in which she told Charles “you are not my King,” and accused him of committing “genocide against our people”.

He wrote on X: “I condemn in the strongest possible terms the actions of Senator Lidia Thorpe today at Parliament House where she hurled verbal abuse at our King.

To show such utter disrespect to King Charles, who has traveled to Australia, despite ongoing cancer treatment, is disgusting. Senator Thorpe has disgraced not only herself and the Australian Parliament, but every Australian man, woman and child.

“Senator Thorpe demanded an apology from King Charles, I’d say it’s King Charles and the Australian people that should be demanding an apology from Senator Thorpe.”

Athena Stavrou21 October 2024 09:12

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Watch live: King Charles and Queen Camilla continue tour of Australia in Canberra

The King and Queen after continuing their tour of Australia after they were confronted by an Indigenous MP during their parliamentary adress.

It is understood the King was unruffled and did not let the outburst overshadow what the royal party viewed as a wonderful day in the Australian capital, which had seen them greet hundreds of well-wishers at the national war memorial – including a sneezing alpaca.

Earlier, hundreds of people had gathered outside Australia’s parliament house for a chance to meet the royal couple.

Athena Stavrou21 October 2024 08:53

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What did King Charles say in his speech before he was confronted?

In his speech to the Australian parliament on Monday, Charles spoke affectionately about his relationship with Australia, a country he first visited as a teenager, saying he arrived as an “adolescent” and left more “chiselled” after his experience studying in the Outback.

He also highlighted the debt he owed to Australia’s Indigenous people.

Charles said: “In my many visits to Australia, I have witnessed the courage and hope that have guided the nation’s long and sometimes difficult journey towards reconciliation.

“Throughout my life, Australia’s First Nations peoples have done me the great honour of sharing, so generously, their stories and cultures. I can only say how much my own experience has been shaped and strengthened by such traditional wisdom.”

(AP)

Athena Stavrou21 October 2024 08:35

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Who is the Australian senator who confronted King Charles?

During his parliamentary address on Monday, Australian senator Lidia Thorpe confronted King Charles, telling him  “You are not my King”.

She is an Indigenous independent politician and became the first Aboriginal senator for the state of Victoria in 2020.

Born into family of prominent Aboriginal activists, Thorpe regularly speaks out about the monarchy’s impact on Indigenous people.

She was sworn into parliament wearing a traditional possum-skin cloak in 2020, carrying an Aboriginal message stick with 441 marks, representing each Indigenous person who had died at the time since the 1991 royal commission into deaths in custody.

In 2022, she was forced to re-do her oath into parliament after she referred to the late Queen Elizabeth as “the colonising Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II”.

(AAP IMAGE)

Athena Stavrou21 October 2024 08:21

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Prince William reveals ‘crucial motto of being a parent’ to George, Charlotte and Louis

William, 42, made the revelation while attending a game hosted by the NFL Foundation UK in London on Tuesday, where he was gifted a football for Prince George, 11, Princess Charlotte, nine, and Prince Louis, six.

Expressing his appreciation for the gift at the Kennington Park hockey pitch, he said: “Oh, that’s very kind. Never go home empty handed! That’s a crucial motto of being a parent.

Prince William reveals crucial parenting motto during community football visit

Alex Croft21 October 2024 08:00

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Senator explains decision to confront King Charles

The senator who confronted King Charles has said she wanted to send a “clear message” to the King during his visit on Monday.

Lidia Thorpe shouted at the King after he finished his speech during his reception in Australia’s parliament. She told the BBC afterwards: “To be sovereign you have to be of the land. He is not of this land.”

She added that the King needed to instruct Parliament to discuss a peace treaty

She said the King needed to instruct the Parliament to discuss a peace treaty with the first peoples.

“We can lead that, we can do that, we can be a better country – but we cannot bow to the coloniser, whose ancestors he spoke about in there are responsible for mass murder and mass genocide,” she told the broadcaster.

Australian Senator Lidia Thorpe stages a protest as Britain's King Charles and Queen Camilla attend a Parliamentary reception in Canberra, Australia
Australian Senator Lidia Thorpe stages a protest as Britain’s King Charles and Queen Camilla attend a Parliamentary reception in Canberra, Australia (via REUTERS)

Athena Stavrou21 October 2024 07:53

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