Queen Elizabeth’s funeral to be held on Sept. 19 at Westminster Abbey

Floral tributes to the late Queen Elizabeth II are seen in Green Park in London on Sept. 10, 2022, two days after she died at the age of 96. (AFP)
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Updated 11 September 2022
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Queen Elizabeth’s funeral to be held on Sept. 19 at Westminster Abbey

  • The coffin will be taken from Balmoral Castle to Edinburgh on Sunday before being flown to London on Tuesday
  • It will later lie in state at Westminster Hall from Wednesday until the morning of the funeral

LONDON: The state funeral for Queen Elizabeth II will be held at Westminster Abbey in London at 11:00 a.m. (1000 GMT) on Monday Sept. 19, royal officials said on Saturday.
Buckingham Palace also confirmed that the queen, who died on Thursday aged 96, will then be taken to St. George’s Chapel at Windsor Castle, west of London, for a committal service.
“We will carry out our duty over the coming days with the heaviest of hearts, but also with the firmest of resolve to ensure a fitting farewell to one of the defining figures of our times,” said the Earl Marshal, Edward Fitzalan-Howard, the Duke of Norfolk.

The queen’s body is currently in an oak coffin covered by the Royal Standard for Scotland, with a wreath of flowers on top, in the ballroom of Balmoral Castle, in northeast Scotland.
Royal officials called it “a scene of quiet dignity.”
The queen’s coffin will be taken on a 180-mile (290-kilometer) trip by road from the remote estate to the Palace of Holyroodhouse in Edinburgh on Sunday.
In the Scottish capital, the coffin will be taken from the Palace of Holyroodhouse to St. Giles’s Cathedral to lie at rest until Tuesday.
It will then be taken by air to Buckingham Palace in London, before lying-in-state at Westminster Hall from Wednesday.
(With AFP and Reuters)


Australian government says firearms hit a record high in 2025

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Australian government says firearms hit a record high in 2025

SYDNEY: The number of firearms in Australia reached an all-time high of more than 4 million in 2025, the center-left government reported ​on Sunday, a day after saying it would introduce a gun reform bill in parliament in response to the Bondi massacre.
There were a record 4,113,735 guns in Australia last year, with 1,158,654 of those in the most populous state of New South Wales where ‌the Bondi attack ‌took place, the government ‌said, citing ⁠Department ​of ‌Home Affairs data.
The Labor government on Saturday said parliament, recalled from its summer break, would debate bills this week to authorize a gun buyback and lower the bar for hate speech prosecutions — measures drafted in the wake of the December ⁠14 shooting that killed 15 at a Hanukkah celebration.
Home Affairs ‌Minister Tony Burke said there ‍were now more guns ‍in Australia than at the time of ‍a 1996 shooting that killed 35 and prompted a gun buyback scheme by the conservative government of former Prime Minister John Howard.
“The deadly antisemitic terrorist attack ​at Bondi Beach is a national tragedy which can never be allowed to ⁠happen again,” Burke said, adding that the government was committed to “getting dangerous guns off our streets.”
New South Wales, responding to the Bondi massacre, passed state laws in December banning private individuals from owning more than four firearms, with exemptions for farmers, who can have up to 10.
The shooting in Bondi has also sparked calls for efforts to tackle antisemitism in Australia. Police say the ‌alleged gunmen were inspired by Daesh.