LONDON: Gun salutes rang out across central London on Tuesday to mark Charles III’s 75th birthday, just over a year since he became king and British head of state after the death of his mother, Queen Elizabeth II. There was a 41-gun salute in Green Park, near Buckingham Palace, and a 62-gun salute at the Tower of London on the banks of the River Thames.

Halfway through his eighth decade, Charles — who shows no sign of a let-up in activity — spent the day carrying out public engagements followed by a private dinner at his London residence. The lifelong environmentalist used his landmark birthday to highlight causes close to his heart, including a visit to a surplus food distribution center with his wife Queen Camilla.

Charles officially launched the Coronation Food Project at a depot in central Oxfordshire and found himself serenaded twice with renditions of "Happy Birthday”. The initiative is aimed at tackling food poverty by redistributing food that would otherwise end up in landfill. The sovereign has penned an article for the latest edition of the Big Issue magazine about food waste and those in need. The magazine helps the homeless by allowing them to become vendors.

"He asked me if I was in accommodation and about selling the ‘Big Issue’,” said seller Kelvin after meeting the king. "I said it’s got me through the bad times and it has a positive social message,” he said. Charles was also hosting a reception at Buckingham Palace for 400 nurses and midwives as part of this year’s 75th anniversary celebrations for the state-run National Health Service (NHS).

LONDON: Members of the Honourable Artillery Company fire a 62 Gun Royal Salute, for the King's 75th Birthday from Tower Wharf, by Tower Bridge .

Cake and a sing-song

Camilla, 76, once revealed that the famously workaholic king is particularly hard to buy gifts for. "I will tell you that he is the most difficult person in the world to buy a present for... So, he likes to make a list of things that he wants so you get it exactly right,” she said. He likes "a cake and a bit of a sing-song”, she said, adding however that it was often difficult to get him to take a break.

Close family and friends are expected at the evening celebration, although his estranged younger son Harry will be missing. A report by BBC online said Harry was expected to telephone his father at some point during the day. A spokesperson for Prince Harry and his American wife Meghan rebutted reports they had turned down an invitation, saying there had been "no contact regarding an invitation to His Majesty’s upcoming birthday”.

Harry, 39, and Meghan, 42, quit royal duties in 2020 and relocated to California. They have since unleashed a barrage of criticisms of the royal family, leading to strained relations with Charles and a damaging rift between Harry and his older brother, heir to the throne Prince William. — AFP

‘Lead diplomat’

Prince Charles Philip Arthur George was born on November 14, 1948, at Buckingham Palace, the first child of future Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip, the Duke of Edinburgh. When he turned 70 in 2018, Charles joked that it was "alarming” and that he had acquired "all the scars that go with” his age.

Charles is marking his 75th birthday in the same year that he was crowned king and just a week after opening the UK parliament for the first time as sovereign. Like his mother, who died at the age of 96 in September 2022, Charles has maintained a busy diary of royal duties despite his advancing years.

But Ed Owens, a royal historian and author, told AFP that Charles had taken on a more active role on the international stage than the late sovereign. Charles had adopted the role of a "kind of international lead diplomat of Great Britain” and the Commonwealth, said Owens, author of "After Elizabeth: Can the Monarchy Save Itself?”

He had also shown that he was happy to speak out about difficult issues linked to colonialism and the British empire. On a visit to Kenya earlier this month, Charles acknowledged there was "no excuse” for colonial-era abuses committed in the East African country. "He’s confronting some of those more problematic histories in a way that Elizabeth II never would have done,” Owens added. — AFP