Home Blog Page 3690

Ando, Diaz-Naranjo in heated battle for Paris Olympic berth

ALL it took for Tokyo Olympian Elreen Ando to rekindle the fire that was distinguished following her catastrophic effort in the continental championships last year was her memorable bronze-medal performance in the Hangzhou Asian Games that same year.

And it was that same fire that kept burning inside the 25-year-old Cebu native when she pocketed a pair of silver in the Asian Weightlifting Championships in Tashkent, Uzbekistan Monday.

The Southeast Asian Games gold medalist lifted 120 kilograms in clean and jerk and 213kg in total in claiming that pair of silver in the women’s 59kg class that only kept her confidence growing but also bolstered her Paris Olympics bid this July.

North Korea’s Kim Il-Gyong took the gold with a 225kg while Indonesia’s Natasya Beteyob copped the bronze with a 212kg.

The effort should push Ms. Ando closer to countrywoman and Olympic gold winner Hidilyn Diaz-Naranjo as the two go into a heated battle for that lone spot for the country in their division to the quadrennial games.

Ms. Diaz-Naranjo skipped Tashkent and opted to join the next Olympic qualification in Bangkok, Thailand next month instead.

At present, Ms. Diaz-Naranjo remains ahead of Ms. Ando despite the former’s absence.

But for sure, Ms. Ando, using that same fire, would do her best to give her rival a worthy fight for that glorious Olympic stint. — Joey Villar

Lillard struggles

THE Bucks are reeling, and even they don’t know why. The other day, they bowed to the middling Jazz even though they led by as much as 19, and by a seemingly comfortable 12 after three quarters. And it wasn’t simply that they absorbed their third loss in four games under new head coach Doc Rivers; it was that they did so with an endgame swoon. They couldn’t buy a bucket in the payoff period, during which they were outscored 40-13 to ultimately lose by 15. The negative turnaround would have been abhorrent under any circumstance, but certainly unacceptable given the presence of All-Star starters Giannis Antetokounmpo and Damian Lillard on the court.

In the aftermath, the Bucks chalked up the setback to uncharacteristic misses. Antetokounmpo argued that it was simply a matter of canning veritable gimmes. “It was a lot of wide-open shots that we didn’t make. You make one or two, the momentum stops and it’s a whole different game,” he said. Rivers concurred, noting that “we couldn’t script better shots … Every shot was wide open, but everything was front rim.” That said, there can be no denying their downhill trajectory. They’ve claimed just two of their last six outings dating back to Joe Prunty’s temporary occupancy of the hot seat.

Considering that the Bucks made the uncharacteristic move of firing Adrian Griffin — whom they handpicked in the offseason — despite a 30-13 slate, they obviously expect immediate dividends with Rivers at the helm. They gave him a $40-million deal spanning four years, indicating their confidence in his capacity to not merely steer them to greater heights heading into the playoffs, but to give them a legitimate shot at bringing home another Larry O’Brien Trophy after their successful bid in 2021. Viewed from rose-colored lenses, their barrage of defeats cannot but be unacceptable.

It’s fair to argue that Rivers deserves some time to view his responsibilities in the context of the resources he has at his disposal. On the other hand, there’s no excuse for the Bucks not taking care of business when they should be; in their last stop prior to snatching failure from the throes of victory against the Jazz, they succumbed to the lowly Blazers. And it bears pointing out that Lillard has struggled for consistency under the new dispensation. Bottom line, this is all on him; he may be in unfamiliar territory, but he’s still presumed to do his job well. It’s why he’s being paid the big bucks, pun wholly intended.

 

Anthony L. Cuaycong has been writing Courtside since BusinessWorld introduced a Sports section in 1994. He is a consultant on strategic planning, operations and human resources management, corporate communications, and business development.

‘A bit of a shock’: King Charles diagnosed with cancer just less than 18 months into his reign

LONDON — After spending more than seven decades waiting to become sovereign, Britain’s King Charles has been diagnosed with a form of cancer less than 18 months since he ascended to the throne.

Buckingham Palace on Monday announced that Charles, 75, would postpone public-facing duties while he undergoes treatment but was looking forward to returning to full public duty as soon as possible.

Charles became monarch on the death of his mother Queen Elizabeth on Sept. 8, 2022, having been the longest-serving heir apparent in British history. He was crowned on May 6, 2023.

Some commentators had warned that the environmental campaigner, who was never shy to give forthright views on many issues as heir, would be a radical change, upending the stoical, dedicated style of his mother.

But instead he has quietly settled into his new role, with his busy routine creating little drama. That made the announcement of his health issues all the more of a surprise.

“I have been brought up to cherish a sense of duty to others, and to hold in the greatest respect the precious traditions, freedoms and responsibilities of our unique history and our system of parliamentary government,” he said in his first address as king.

Supporters and detractors have always acknowledged Charles’ hard work and dedication to his duties. Royal commentators said that might be something that would have to change as he recovers from treatment.

“The man never stops. I mean when we were kids there was bags and bags and bags of work that the office just sent to him. We could barely even get to his desk to say goodnight to him,” son and heir Prince William said in a documentary to mark his 70th birthday.

While details of the royals’ health is considered a private matter, Charles has always appeared well, following a daily exercise routine to keep fit and eschewing lunch.

There was no indication that he had received the news about his cancer diagnosis when he appeared in public on Sunday to attend church with his wife Queen Camilla.

“He’s the king, he’s got to put on a show and he’s been doing it all his life,” said Ingrid Seward, editor-in-chief of Majesty Magazine.

Opinion polls suggest that while Charles is not as popular as his much-admired mother was, many more people hold favorable views of him than negative, although there also appears to be a wide segment of indifference — people who didn’t hold a view either way.

“I think he does a pretty wonderful job, to be honest, I’m a big fan,” said hotel manager Andy Bloomer, 38, in central London.

On the issue of his health he added: “I’m sure he is aware of how much that will connect him to other people, other families who go through that. It’s a bit of a shock.”

The one major shadow that has hung over Charles’ reign has come in the form of his younger son Prince Harry and his attacks on his family and the monarchy in his memoir and Netflix documentary with wife Meghan.

But Harry, who has barely returned to Britain since he and Meghan moved to California in 2020, is jetting back to see his father after learning of his illness, in a sign of a possible rapprochement.

As messages wishing the king well flooded in from heads of state across the world, some ordinary Britons said they had been shaken by the news.

“We loved his mum… I was born just after she came to the throne, so she was part of my life, for my whole life,” said retired architect Steve Costello, 65. “I wish him well. It’s very sad. Very sad.” — Reuters

US to restrict visas for those who misuse commercial spyware

REUTERS/KACPER PEMPEL/FILE PHOTO

WASHINGTON — The United States on Monday announced a new visa restriction policy for those it said were misusing commercial spyware.

The policy announced by Secretary of State Antony Blinken will allow the State Department to impose visa restrictions for individuals believed to have been involved in the abuse of commercial spyware, as well as for those who facilitate such actions and benefit from it.

US officials say the new policy is part of a wider effort to shape the behavior of foreign governments and individual companies that are involved in malicious digital espionage activities. Historically, these companies have been accused of developing platforms that facilitated hacks against human rights activists, journalists and opposition politicians in the developing world.

The new policy will also apply to investors and operators of the commercial spyware believed to be misused, a senior Biden administration official said. At least 50 US officials have been targeted by private hacking tools in recent years, they added.

President Joseph R. Biden signed an executive order last year to curb the malicious use of digital spy tools around the globe that target US personnel and civil society. The order barred US agencies from doing business with such companies, limiting their business potential.

The Commerce Department also added several surveillance firms to its economic trade blacklist in 2021 and 2023, including Hungary-based Cytrox, Greek firm Intellexa and Israeli outfits NSO Group and Candiru.

The new policy, which is organized under the existing Immigration and National Act, applies to a broad group of individuals involved in hacking operations that in some form “surveil, harass, suppress, or intimidate individuals including journalists, activists, other persons perceived to be dissidents for their work, members of marginalized communities or vulnerable populations, or the family members of these targeted individuals.”

In March last year, the United States and some of its partner countries called for strict domestic and international controls to counter the proliferation and misuse of commercial spyware. — Reuters

Deadly California storm triggers flooding, power outages and mudslides

The remains of a home destroyed by a mudslide caused by heavy rain in Los Angeles, California, Feb. 5, 2024. -- REUTERS

LOS ANGELES — A deadly Pacific storm, the second “Pineapple Express” weather system to sweep the West Coast in less than a week, dumped torrential rain over Southern California on Monday, triggering street flooding and mudslides throughout the region.

Extreme-weather advisories for floods, high wind and winter storm conditions were posted on Monday across parts of California and southwestern Arizona where some 35 million people live, and authorities urged residents to limit their driving.

The National Weather Service documented staggering rainfall amounts from the storm, which lashed Northern California on Sunday with hurricane-force gusts of wind, along with heavy precipitation that intensified as the system moved south on Sunday night and Monday.

The National Weather Service (NWS) said more than 10 inches(25 cm) of rain had fallen since Sunday across the Los Angeles area, the nation’s second-largest city, with much more expected before the downpour was due to taper off later in the week.

Nearly a foot of rain was measured over a 24-hour period on the campus of the University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA).

“We’re talking about one of the wettest storm systems to impact the greater Los Angeles area” since records began, Ariel Cohen, chief NWS meteorologist in L.A., told an evening news conference. “Going back to the 1870s, this is one of the top three.”

US President Joseph R. Biden spoke to California Governor Gavin Newsom and Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass and pledged to provide federal aid to areas hard hit by a Pacific storm pummeling the state, the White House said.

The Los Angeles Police Department reported scores of traffic collisions with injuries since the storm began, many more than usual, while city Fire Chief Kristin Crowley said her crews had responded to at least 130 flooding incidents by Monday morning.

In one such incident, a fire department helicopter team rescued a man who had jumped into the churning waters of the Pacoima Wash, a concrete flood channel, in a desperate attempt to save his dog, department officials said.

The man was ultimately hoisted to safety, as seen in video footage shot by a firefighter and posted to social medial, while his pet managed to dog-paddle to the edge and also survived.

SECOND ATMOSPHERIC RIVER IN DAYS
The intense rainfall, with heavy snow in high-elevation mountain areas, was carried to California by a storm system meteorologists call an atmospheric river, a vast airborne current of dense moisture funneled inland from the Pacific.

The latest tempest, and a less powerful storm that hit California on Wednesday and Thursday, also qualified as a “Pineapple Express,” a type of atmospheric river originating from the subtropical waters around Hawaii.

Winds gusting to 75 miles per hour (121 kph) on Sunday downed trees and utility lines across the San Francisco Bay Area and California’s Central Coast, knocking out power to roughly 875,000 homes at the storm’s peak in that region.

At least two people were killed by wind-toppled trees on Sunday — an 82-year-old man in the former gold rush town of Yuba City and a 45-year-old man at Boulder Creek in the coastal Santa Cruz Mountains

The greatest flash-flooding threat on Monday centered on Southern California, the NWS said, as the system slowly pivoted and pushed farther into the interior of California, but forecasters said “catastrophic” impacts were unlikely.

“There’s widespread, significant flooding, and locally serious and severe flooding, but nothing that is completely off-the-walls insane,” UCLA meteorologist and climate scientist Daniel Swain said during a YouTube briefing on Monday.

HILLSIDE COMMUNITIES HARDEST HIT
A number of upscale communities built on the slopes of the Hollywood Hills, Beverly Hills and Topanga Canyon were among the hardest hit by from landslides.

Los Angeles officials reported 120 mudslides and debris flows throughout the city on Monday, and at least 25 structures damaged by heavy rainfall or mudslides as of Monday evening, Ms. Crowley said.

Beverly Hills resident Jeb Johenning, standing in a neighborhood where cars stood half buried in muck and debris, said he noticed three fissures had opened on a hillside near his home, releasing “an avalanche of mud” down the slope.

“I was driving up here last night, right after the Grammys, and coincidentally, my neighbor, who was in this SUV behind us, was being dropped off at his house, and the driver’s coming down the hill, and the mud is chasing the driver,” Mr. Johenning recalled.

Still, the overall extent of property damage in the region appeared less severe than might have been expected given record amounts of precipitation, Mr. Swain said, citing two possible reasons.

Rainfall rates were diminishing as the storm wore on, and last summer’s Southern California wildfire season was mild compared with some previous years, leaving more hillsides and canyon walls able to withstand a heavy soaking without collapse.

Flooding nevertheless posed a considerable hazard. Rescue teams pulled dozens of people to safety statewide, mostly motorists trapped in their cars by rising waters when they tried to drive through flooded roadways, Brian Ferguson, spokesperson for the Governor’s Office of Emergency Services (OES), said.

Evacuation orders were in effect for several neighborhoods at particularly high risk of flash floods and mudslides, he said.

“We’re not out of the woods yet,” Mr. Ferguson said. “There could continue be very dangerous impacts all through Southern California today and tomorrow.”  — Reuters

EU facing backlash over some green policies

REUTERS

BRUSSELS — What a difference five years make. During the last European Union (EU) elections in 2019, hundreds of thousands across the 27-nation bloc staged protests to fight climate change. Ahead of this year’s EU vote, farmers are in the streets demanding fewer green rules, and politicians cannot afford to ignore them.

A shift in political tone around how to protect the planet is looming over EU Parliament elections in June, even as climate change unleashes more severe and costly extreme weather.

“There is a clear backlash on the agriculture part of the Green Deal,” said French EU lawmaker Pascal Canfin.

“But there is no backlash for the rest,” he said.

To appease farmers protesting low food prices and high EU environmental standards, the EU last week loosened environmental regulations on fallow land while France paused a national pesticide reduction policy.

But the overall EU ‘Green Deal’ vision for tackling climate change remains intact, supported by more than two dozen laws passed over the last five years to reduce the greenhouse gas emissions that cause climate change.

The policies already in place are unlikely to be withdrawn. But the EU’s recent attempts to fold broader environmental policies into this package have faltered. In the last few months, EU countries and lawmakers have shot down or weakened new laws on industrial pollution, cutting pesticide use and restoring damaged nature.

“We shouldn’t mix environment and climate,” said Peter Liese, an EU lawmaker from the center-right European People’s Party, the biggest political family in the EU parliament.

“If we want to be carbon neutral and still want to be industrialized… we cannot do everything at the same time,” he said.

NEXT STEPS
An EU proposal on Tuesday will test the political mood. The European Commission is set to recommend an ambitious goal to cut net greenhouse gas emissions by 90% by 2040. The target would aim to foster green jobs and low-carbon industries, drafts of the proposal showed.

But the goal will need approval from the next EU parliament after the elections, which some EU officials fear could lose the broad support that climate policies have enjoyed since 2019.

Polls show more seats could go to far-right and right-leaning parties opposed to climate policies. EU officials say backing for ambitious green laws has also been eroded among EU states by recent elections in Finland, Sweden, the Netherlands and Luxembourg.

“All this green policy is not accepted anymore. It makes people’s lives very difficult. It makes people’s lives very expensive,” said Rob Roos, an EU lawmaker in the eurosceptic European Conservatives and Reformists Group.

“We should abolish the Green Deal because it’s not what the people want,” Mr. Roos told Reuters. Polls suggest his group could win 27% more seats in the upcoming election than it has now.

COST WORRIES
Surveys show that while a large majority of Europeans support ambitious action to fight climate change, a majority is also worried about the cost of doing this.

“This is a big misunderstanding. People think that if our ambition is lower, we will be more competitive. That’s simply not true,” Bulgaria’s climate minister Julian Popov said.

Mr. Popov and other green policy supporters warn halting climate policy will ultimately cost more, as worsening climate change would hit economies harder with devastating floods and fires. They say green policies are needed to establish a technological advantage that will help EU industries compete with China.

With CO2 emissions policies until 2030 already agreed, the new EU parliament and Commission formed after elections will focus on plans for curbing CO2 beyond 2030. That will require faster emissions reductions in industry and farming, politically sensitive sectors struggling with high energy prices and competition from abroad.

“The competitiveness risk to Europe… that won’t be reversed by us going weak on climate,” said Irish climate minister Eamon Ryan, who described the competitiveness of industry, and how climate policies can ensure this, as central to the election.

“It is a real issue, and every vote counts,” Mr. Ryan said. — Reuters

Convicted Thai ex-PM Thaksin facing possible royal insults charge

FORMER Thai Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra — REUTERS

BANGKOK — Thailand’s attorney general is considering prosecuting convicted former Thai premier Thaksin Shinawatra over an alleged insult of the powerful monarchy, an official said on Tuesday, just weeks away from his possible release on parole.

The complaint concerns a 2015 interview he gave while in South Korea and was filed by a junta that ran Thailand after the military overthrew a government led by Mr. Thaksin’s sister. He has repeatedly pledged loyalty to the monarchy.

Insulting the crown is a serious offense and a major slur in Thailand, where the constitution states the king must be held in a position of “revered worship”. The lese-majeste law is among the world’s strictest, with each perceived offence punishable by up to 15 years in prison.

The influential Mr. Shinawatra, prime minister from 2001-2006, made a dramatic homecoming last August from 15 years in self-imposed exile to serve an eight-year jail sentence for abuse of power, later commuted to one year by the king.

The billionaire is being detained at a hospital with an undisclosed health problem and has yet to spend a full night in prison. He is eligible for parole later this month.

Prayut Petchkhun, spokesperson for the attorney-general’s office, told reporters the seven-year delay in acting on the royal insults complaint was because Mr. Thaksin had been abroad.

He gave no timeframe for when a decision would be taken, adding Mr. Thaksin, 74, had denied wrongdoing and provided authorities with “a letter requesting fairness”. He did not elaborate on the allegation against the former prime minister.

If Mr. Thaksin is freed he would be detained by police, Mr. Prayut said, adding he could be released temporarily while the attorney general considers whether to press charges.

Mr. Thaksin’s lawyer did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Thailand current government is backed by the Shinawatra family, with Mr. Thaksin’s return coinciding with ally and real estate mogul Srettha Thavisin becoming prime minister that same day.

Mr. Thaksin’s allies have denied speculation of a backroom political deal between the former leader and his powerful enemies.

The announcement of a possible new case against the ex prime minister comes a week after Move Forward, the biggest party in parliament, was forced by a court to abandon its controversial plan to amend the lese-majeste law.

Move Forward was hit days after by a succession of complaints seeking its dissolution and life bans for dozens of lawmakers over its stance on the law protecting the crown. — Reuters

Canva, GCash team up for new subscription plans

COURTESY OF CANVA

Canva announced new and more affordable subscription plans on Monday, allowing customers to avail of 1- and 7-day Canva Pro subscriptions made even more convenient by GCash.

The aim is to give Filipinos access to Canva’s paid content and artificial intelligence (AI)-powered design features with varied price points and payment methods.

“By offering these plans and making Canva Pro available via GCash, we believe that anyone — regardless of their design needs — can now access Canva Pro using local payment options they already have and start designing anytime, with no strings attached,” said Maisie Littaua, Canva Philippines’ head of growth, in a statement.

Canva Pro allows access to premium templates and a library of over 100 million stock photos, videos, audio, graphics, and more.

Canva Pro users will likewise have access to Magic Studio, a suite of AI-powered design solutions that includes Magic Write (a text generator) and Magic Design (an idea visualization tool).

To subscribe to Canva’s 1-day and 7-day plans, users have to sign in to canva.com, click “Try Canva Pro,” and select the “One-time” payment plan.

The 1-day plan costs P49 and the 7-day plan, P119. Currently, monthly subscriptions begin at P299, while a yearly subscription starts at P2,490. Canva also offers free services, but with limited features.

Apart from GCash, users can nalso pay for Canva Pro viaPayPal or credit or debit card.

Canva was launched in 2013 and is used in 190 countries. In the Philippines, its community of freelancers and entrepreneurs in the Philippines has grown to over 180,000 members. — Patricia B. Mirasol

Century Properties Group, Inc. Series B preferred shares follow-on offering

 


Spotlight is BusinessWorld’s sponsored section that allows advertisers to amplify their brand and connect with BusinessWorld’s audience by enabling them to publish their stories directly on the BusinessWorld website. For more information, send an email to online@bworldonline.com.

Join us on Viber at https://bit.ly/3hv6bLA to get more updates and subscribe to BusinessWorld’s titles and get exclusive content through www.bworld-x.com.

China says it opposes and cracks down on all forms of cyberattacks

PHILSTAR FILE PHOTO
MANILA — The Chinese government does not tolerate any form of cyberattacks and will not allow any country or individual to engage in such illegal activities using Chinese infrastructure, its embassy in the Philippines said.
It made the assurances after the Philippines on Monday said that hackers from China last month attempted to break into government websites, including President Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr.’s personal website, but failed.
Manila did not say the hackers were linked to any state, but said they were found to be using the services of Chinese state-owned company Unicom. Unicom did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
“The Chinese government all along firmly opposes and cracks down on all forms of cyber attack in accordance with law, allows no country or individual to engage in cyber attack and other illegal activities on Chinese soil or using Chinese infrastructure,” a spokesperson at the Chinese Embassy in Manila said late on Monday.
The Philippines is currently working on a five-year cybersecurity strategy to beef up its cyber defences. Its military last year announced it would create a cyber command. — Reuters

Australia’s central bank holds rates, warns further hike might be needed

BEN MACK/PEXELS
SYDNEY — Australia’s central bank held interest rates steady on Tuesday as expected, but cautioned that a further increase could not be ruled out given inflation was still too high and it needed to see more evidence that price pressures were cooling.
Wrapping up its February policy meeting, the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) kept rates at a 12-year high of 4.35%, having last lifted them by a quarter point in November.
Markets had wagered heavily on a steady outcome given inflation had eased by more than expected in the fourth quarter and suspected rates have peaked.
The slight chance of another rate hike, however, sent the Australian dollar 0.3% higher to $0.6504, while three-year bond futures were down 5 ticks to 96.3.
“While recent data indicate that inflation is easing, it remains high… The Board needs to be confident that inflation is moving sustainably towards the target range,” said the RBA Board in a statement.
“The path of interest rates that will best ensure that inflation returns to target in a reasonable timeframe will depend upon the data and the evolving assessment of risks, and a further increase in interest rates cannot be ruled out.”
The RBA has jacked up interest rates by 425 basis points since May 2022 to tame stubbornly high inflation. Although inflation fell to a two-year low of 4.1% in the fourth quarter and has moved some way off the peak of 7.8% from late 2022, it is still well above the central bank’s 2-3% target band.
However, the economy has slowed to a crawl, the red-hot labor market has started to loosen and consumer spending remained soft amid the costs of living pressures and high mortgage rates.
Taking off the pressure to hike is the drastic change in overseas monetary policy outlooks since the RBA last met in early December. Markets are now pricing in a total easing of 114 basis points and 123 bps from the Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank, respectively, this year.
However, most economists don’t expect any rate relief from the RBA until September. — Reuters

King Charles diagnosed with cancer, will postpone duties and undergo treatment

KING CHARLES — REUTERS

LONDON — Britain’s King Charles has been diagnosed with a form of cancer and the 75-year-old will postpone his public duties while he undergoes treatment, Buckingham Palace said on Monday.

Charles, who became king in September 2022 following the death of his mother Queen Elizabeth, is “wholly positive” about his treatment and looks forward to returning to full public duty as soon as possible, the palace said.

Charles spent three nights in hospital last month where he underwent a corrective procedure for a benign enlarged prostate. The palace said a separate issue of concern had been spotted during the hospital visit, but did not given any further details beyond saying the king had a “form of cancer”.

“His Majesty has today commenced a schedule of regular treatments, during which time he has been advised by doctors to postpone public-facing duties,” the palace said. “Throughout this period, His Majesty will continue to undertake State business and official paperwork as usual.”

As such, Charles will continue to have meetings with Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, while his wife Queen Camilla will continue with her engagements.

The news comes just days after Charles and his daughter-in-law Kate left the same hospital where they had both undergone planned treatments.

Kate, the Princess of Wales and wife to heir to the British throne Prince William, spent two weeks in hospital following abdominal surgery for an unspecified but non-cancerous condition.

While the royals usually closely guard details of their health, regarding it as a private matter, Charles has been open about his recent treatment.

“His Majesty has chosen to share his diagnosis to prevent speculation and in the hope it may assist public understanding for all those around the world who are affected by cancer,” Buckingham Palace said.

Prime Minister Sunak sent his best wishes to the King on X. “I have no doubt he’ll be back to full strength in no time and I know the whole country will be wishing him well,” he said.

The rest of the royal family have been told about the king’s cancer diagnosis. Prince Harry, his younger son, will travel to the UK to see him in the coming days, a source close to the Duke of Sussex said.

Harry now lives in California with his American wife Meghan and their two children after the couple stepped down from royal duties in 2020.

Charles’ first year on the throne was dominated by his coronation – Britain’s biggest ceremonial event for generations, full of pomp and pageantry.

While before he became king there were suggestions that the long-time environmental campaigner would bring a radical overhaul of the monarchy, Charles has generally followed in the style of his mother while trying to add some of his own touches.

Polls suggest most Britons have a favorable view of his reign so far, although younger generations appear much less enthusiastic.

Prior to his recent health issues, the biggest shadow over the royals was the ongoing fallout between his son Harry and the rest of his family, most notably Harry’s elder brother Prince William. — Reuters

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT