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Thursday, April 28, 2011

Beatrice is the star of royal red carpet in white tulle and sequins at the Queen's pre-wedding gala dinner

Princess Beatrice stole the show last night at a dinner that was held for royals from across Europe and the Middle East.

The daughter of Prince Andrew and the Duchess of York looked stunning in her white and silver sheath dress covered with sequins and tulle fishtail as she arrived at the Queen's gala dinner last night.

She was with her sister, Eugenie, who turned up at the event at the Mandarin Oriental Hotel in Knightsbridge in a dress thought to be designed by Vivienne Westwood.




Princess Beatrice looked stunning as she arrived at the pre-wedding dinner at the Mandarin Oriental Hotel in Knightsbridge, central London


 Prince and Princess Michael of Kent, left, and Queen Sofia of Spain




 Crown Prince Pavlos and Crown Princess Marie-Chantal of Greece, left, and Prince Felipe of Asturias





 Prince Charles went along to the hotel but left before dinner so that he could eat with Princes William and Harry

 Sweden's Crown Princess Victoria and the Duke of Vastergotland, left, and Queen Anne-Marie of Greece

 Britain's Princess Alexandra, left, and Queen Margrethe II of Denmark


 Grand Duke and Duchess Henri and Teresa of Luxembourg, left, and Prince Edward and Sophie, Duchess of Wessex







 One's here now: The Queen was fashionably late in a long lilac dress with silver swirls







Their father, the Duke of York, attended along with his sister, Princess Anne, and brother, the Earl of Wessex, Prince Edward.

The Prince of Wales and Duchess of Cornwall missed the dinner but attended a drinks reception beforehand.

Instead they dined at Clarence House, their official London home, with Princes William and Harry.

Less than a minute's drive away, Kate Middleton was with her family at the exclusive Goring Hotel in Belgravia.

Royal guests arrived through the five-star hotel's back entrance, overlooking Hyde Park and hundreds of eager waiting fans.

Sophie, Countess of Wessex, accompanied by her husband, the Earl of Wessex, stunned the crowd with a red floor-length dress.

The Queen was fashionably late in a long lilac dress with silver swirls and was met by Lady Anson, the evening's host and the Queen's cousin and was greeted with a kiss on both cheeks outside the hotel.

Earlier, the Princess Royal arrived by minibus along with Zara Phillips and Mike Tindall, and Peter Phillips and Autumn Kelly. Prince and Princess Michael of Kent, Lord Freddie Windsor and Lady Gabriella came in a separate coach.

Other royal guests included Prince Pavlos of Greece and Princess Marie-Chantal, Queen Sofia of Spain, Prince Felipe and Princess Letizia of Spain, Queen Margarethe of Denmark, Crown Prince Alexander of Serbia and Princess Katherine, the Grand Duke and Duchess of Luxembourg, King Harald of Norway and Queen Sonia.

Queen fusses about every detail of wedding bash says royal cousin charged with planning party

The run-up to any big event is tiring for any party planner, so it is little wonder that Lady Elizabeth Anson is fortifying herself with extremely strong tea as she gears up for tomorrow’s royal wedding.

The flame-haired 69-year-old is an adviser for the wedding and tells us that her cousin the Queen has been very hands on with the wedding arrangements.

‘People might think she wouldn’t have time to worry about menus and tastings and how things look, but she is the most meticulous hostess,’ says Anson, in a cut-glass English accent.

‘She is really interested in what people are going to eat or when they are going to get drinks and making sure that they not waiting too long.’


 The wedding brings back many memories of that of Prince Charles to Princess Diana - it did not last, but it was a fairytale occasion Cousins: Lady Elizabeth Anson, left, is preparing herself by drinking strong tea and, she says, the Queen has been very hands on with arranging the wedding



 Lady Anson says she hopes the public and press don't try and compare Kate to Princess Diana

 The crowds will turn out in force tomorrow to see the newly weds appear on the balcony after their trip from Westminster Abbey to Buckingham Palace



One's throne a party: After the wedding the Throne Room will host the party of the century with some of the most high-profile people in the world





When you get to the altar steps your immediate family are sitting on either side, so you feel you are getting married in a chapel with just your family,’ she explains.

The couple had a daughter but the marriage faltered. She and her husband spent more than 25 years living apart before splitting up for good last year - using a do-it-yourself divorce kit from stationer’s Rymans.

Anson may have married in Westminster Abbey like Kate Middleton but she has often been compared to Princess Diana. Both young women’s aristocratic parents split when they were very young, and both went on to suffer from an eating disorder and crippling shyness in their teens.

‘I had bright red hair, I had freckles and I had a big round moon face as a child. I was seriously overweight,’ she says. ‘I was called ‘Tubby’ at school and it’s pretty difficult to shrug that off.’

After her parents separated when she was four, Anson’s mother moved to Paris and the couple’s children divided their time between France and their father’s ancestral seat of Shugborough in Staffordshire.

When he died suddenly, Lady Elizabeth was just 16 and she took over the running of the household, while her older brother - the late Patrick Lichfield, who went on to be a famous society photographer - inherited his title aged only 18.

She launched Party Planners at 19, and was soon organising lavish bashes for high profile clients - including the Royal family.

Anson hoots with laughter when she remembers a disco organised at Windsor Castle for Prince Charles and Princess Anne when they were teenagers. She recalls: ‘Prince Charles was so shy he would only talk to the mothers and the older women and Princess Anne was trying to give it a go but she was only 14.’

She went on to advise on the wedding of both Prince Andrew and Prince Edward.

While obviously close to the Royal Family, there was a minor hiccup in their relationship two years ago when Anson was reportedly asked to withdraw some of the late Queen Mother’s personal letters from an auction in Paris - on request of the Queen.

The documents could have raised a large sum considering that the previous year a note in which the Queen Mother had written to a servant asking that gin and Dubonnet should be packed for an outing sold for £16,000. But if there was any animosity between the cousins it appears to have passed and the Queen attended Elizabeth’s recent party celebrating 50 years of Party Planners at St James’s Palace.

A guest at what she describes as ‘dozens and dozens’ of Royal Weddings over the years, Anson is surprised how much they have changed. In the past, the high point, partywise, of a royal wedding would be a ball held a couple of days before the ceremony - meaning the reception on the wedding day itself would be a small family affair.

Prince Edward and Sophie Rhys-Jones’s wedding in 1999 was the turning point. ‘Prince Edward and Sophie Rhys-Jones got married in St George’s Chapel, Windsor, at five o’clock and they had an evening reception. That was when they began getting into the modern idea of the whole thing going into one reception with a dance.’

After tomorrow’s abbey service, a reception at Buckingham Palace for 600 guests will begin straight after followed by a dance for 300 in the evening.

‘Most of the old who are going will be leaving after dinner, allowing the young have fun,’ she says.

While Anson might not make it to Saturday’s 6am ‘survivors’ breakfast’ reportedly being planned by Prince Harry, she has been busy planning her own appearance as a guest and has been on the Dukan diet (like Carol Middleton). She is chuffed to have lost 33lb.

Only once has Anson encountered any problem with clients. In the 1990s she was embroiled in a bitter seven-year legal battle with the socialite Ivana Trump for whom she had organised a lavish wedding party - with hot-air ballooning, lunch and a gourmet dinner.

The two women fell out over the £36,500 bill, with Anson pursuing Trump for £6,500 in unpaid fees. The case eventually went to court and a judge found in Trump’s favour, leaving Anson with a legal bill reported to be £110,000, and rebuked both women for wasting the court’s time.

The spat clearly hasn’t put her off arranging spectacular parties. Anson shows no sign of slowing down, and is organising an event for 600 just the day after the Royal Wedding.

When asked which is the best party she has ever organised. She automatically replies, ‘the next one’. Few who see the fruits of her labours tomorrow are likely to argue with that verdict.

Roadside Bomb Blast Kills Five in Karachi, third this week

Security officials examine a bus after it was damaged by a bomb in Karachi April 28, 2011. The roadside bomb hit the bus carrying Pakistani navy officials in the port city of Karachi on Thursday, killing three people and wounding at least seven,Taliban militants in Pakistan extended their campaign of violence Thursday against the country's security forces, targeting the navy for the third time this week with a bombing that killed five in the southern city of Karachi ...


US helps Libyan rebels, fighting rages in west



Sign of stalemate: A Gaddafi forces tank, destroyed by Nato air strikes, on the road between Ajdabiyah and Brega near the western gate of Ajdabiyah, April 26, 2011, impotent to do much about this rebel appeal to stop the killings.


The United States took steps to throw a financial lifeline to rebels controlling eastern Libya while forces loyal to Muammar Gaddafi focused their firepower on pockets of resistance in the west.

Rebels said Gaddafi’s forces fired Russian-made Grad rockets, which rights groups say should not be used in civilian areas, at the rebel-held western towns of Misrata and Zintan following Nato strikes to free Misrata’s port.



In Zintan, the rebels struck back.

“Rebels attacked posts belonging to Gaddafi forces east of Zintan in the early evening,” spokesman Abdulrahman told Reuters. “The posts have been used to fire rockets into Zintan.

“The rebels destroyed at least three tanks and captured two others.”

Remoter areas of western Libya also came under fire from forces loyal to Gaddafi, trying to break an uprising against his four-decade rule that has put most of the east in rebel hands since it began in mid-February.

“Many in the Western Mountains in towns such as Yefrin, Zintan and Kabau are being killed by this indiscriminate shelling,” senior rebel National Council spokesman Abdel Hafiz Ghoga told a news conference in Benghazi in the east.

The United States voiced confidence in the Benghazi-based main opposition council yesterday as the US Treasury moved to permit oil deals with the group, which is struggling to provide funding for the battle-scarred areas under its control.

The order by the US Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control may help to clear up concerns among potential buyers over legal complications related to ownership of Libyan oil and the impact of international sanctions.

The first major oil shipment from rebel-held east Libya, reported to be 80,000 tonnes of crude, was expected to arrive in Singapore today for refuelling but oil traders told Reuters finding a buyer was not straightforward, with many of the usual traders still worried about legal complications.

A tanker booked for Italian oil company Eni to carry crude to Italy from Gaddafi-held territory in Libya never arrived in port and left empty last week because the sanctions meant the government would not have got paid, trade sources said.

“They didn’t want the crude to go, because they wouldn’t have gotten any money for it,” an industry source said yesterday, adding, “they could use it to refine into gasoline.”

Fighting out of sight

Residents say pro-Gaddafi forces have been surrounding mountain-top towns in western Libya, cutting them off from food, water and fuel supplies and unleashing indiscriminate bombardments on their homes with rockets and mortars.

Libyan officials deny targeting civilians, saying they are fighting armed gangs and al Qaeda sympathisers who are terrorising the local population.

Rebels who seized a remote post on the western border with Tunisia hurriedly dug trenches after hearing that forces loyal to Gaddafi were on their way to retake the crossing.

The sound of distant explosions could occasionally be heard coming from the Libyan side of the border, signs of a battle that has been going on for weeks in the Western Mountains region, largely out of sight of the outside world.

The rebel spokesman in the Western Mountains town of Zintan, scene of some of the region’s most intense fighting, said there was heavy bombardment there yesterday, that at least 15 people were wounded and five houses destroyed.

Misrata also came under fire from Grad missiles, the rebels said, after Nato air strikes forced Gaddafi’s troops away from the port, the only connection the besieged city has with the outside world.

Both the rebels and the European Union said the shelling of the Misrata port threatened a vital supply and rescue route.

“We are receiving reports of hospitals being overwhelmed by a growing number of wounded,” EU Commissioner Kristalina Georgieva said in a statement.

An aid ship took advantage of a brief lull in the fighting to rescue Libyans and a French journalist wounded in the fighting in Misrata, along with migrant workers, from the western rebel enclave and headed for Benghazi, centre of the rebel heartland in the east.

“Despite heavy shelling of the port area . . . about 935 migrants and Libyans have been rescued and are now safely en route to Benghazi,” the International Organisation for Migration (IOM) said.

A UN human rights group is in Libya to investigate accusations pro-Gaddafi forces have violated human rights and attacked civilians

Kandahar jail governor detained after mass breakout


General Dastgir points to the way out — one at a time — at the time the jailbreak was discovered on 25 April, 2011.

The governor of the Afghan jail where hundreds of insurgents this week escaped through a tunnel built by the Taliban has been detained along with several top aides, an intelligence source told Reuters today.

General Ghulam Dastgir, who headed the high-security Sarposa jail where almost 500 fighters escaped along a dirt shaft fitted with lights and air pipes, was led away in handcuffs following a preliminary investigation, the source said on condition of anonymity.

Also detained were eight others including Dastgir’s deputy governor and several senior prison managers, he said.

A spokesman for Tooryalai Wesa, the governor of southern Kandahar province where the jail was located, confirmed several detentions at the prison, but declined to name anyone.

“A number of people were detained because they neglected their duties,” the spokesman said.




Several police from stations located around the prison on the outskirts of Kandahar city had also been dismissed for sleeping when they should have been on patrol as the escape took place under cover of darkness, he said.

Afghanistan’s government has launched a full investigation into the breakout, the second in three years at the jail, which Karzai’s chief spokesman said had exposed serious holes in the country’s security preparedness.

In 2008, about 1,000 prisoners including Taliban fighters escaped after a truck bomb blew open the jail gates. That mass escape quickly led to a surge in fighting.

Obama shows longer birth certificate born by Kenya Father in Hawaii.

 The birth certificate that the White House released.


President Obama: “We do not have time for this silliness.”

President Barack Obama yesterday released a longer version of his birth certificate to answer some Republicans who claim he was not US born, and blasted “carnival barkers” who refuse to let the issue die.

Obama took the unusual step of making a statement in the White House press briefing room to comment on the controversy, which has been raised most recently by real estate tycoon Donald Trump as he tests the waters for a possible 2012 run for the Republican presidential nomination.

“We do not have time for this silliness,” Obama said in an easy-going appearance that turned serious when he addressed what he called a distraction from the real issues.

US television networks broke into their regular programming for Obama’s statement, giving him valuable air time just as the 2012 campaign is beginning to stir.



“I can’t get the networks to break in on all kinds of other discussions,” the president said with a smile as he stepped onto the podium.

Obama in his two years in office has had to deal with charges that he does not meet the constitutional requirement that a president must be US born, and separately, some have said he was a Muslim, when in fact he is a Christian.

The cable news chatter over whether Obama’s birthplace has had consequences: A CBS News/New York Times poll last week said a quarter of all Americans — and 45 per cent of Republicans — believed Obama was not born in the United States.

The new document confirms what a shorter version released in 2008 has said, that Obama was born in Honolulu, Hawaii, on August 4, 1961, the son of a father from Kenya and a mother from Kansas.

Trump, speaking in New Hampshire, told reporters that he was “really happy” that Obama addressed the issue and was ready to debate other issues.

“I feel I’ve accomplished something really, really important and I’m honoured by it,” Trump said in remarks shown live on CNN.




Some conspiracy theorists have tried to make the case that the “Certificate of Live Birth” released in the 2008 campaign was insufficient and that Obama was in fact born in Kenya, even though the short form issued by the Hawaiian state government was all that was necessary for official business such as obtaining a driver’s licence.

The longer version provides a little more information, such as that he was born at Kapiolani Maternity and Gynaecological Hospital in Honolulu to father Barack Hussein Obama, a 25-year-old Kenyan, and 18-year-old mother, Ann Dunham Obama of Wichita, Kansas. It is dated August 8, 1961.

Why now?

Obama said he recognised that this document still would not satisfy “a segment of people for which, no matter what we put out, this issue will not be put to rest”.

Obama said he decided to address the issue now because in recent weeks during a budget debate with Republicans he saw that some news outlets were instead focused on the so-called birther issue.

He said he was confident US politicians could reach agreement on serious disputes, “but we’re not going to be able to do it if we are distracted”.

“We’re not going to be able to do it if we just make stuff up and pretend that facts are not facts. We’re not going to be able to solve our problems if we get distracted by sideshows and carnival barkers,” he said.

The objective for Obama, who is seeking re-election in 2012, was to appear as the adult in American politics, eager to discuss real issues, and American voters may give him some credit for the move.

Obama’s appearance came as he is struggling with a variety of issues, including trying to bring down petrol prices that in many areas have surged past US$4 a gallon.

Republican National Committee chairman Reince Priebus tried to turn the tables on Obama, saying: “Unfortunately, his campaign politics and talk about birth certificates is distracting him from our number one priority — our economy.”

Former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney, who is raising money to run for the Republican nomination to challenge Obama, said on Twitter: “What President Obama should really be releasing is a jobs plan.”

Britain withdraws Syria’s royal wedding invitation


Armed police officers patrol outside The Goring hotel in London April 28, 2011. Kate Middleton and her family will stay at the hotel Thursday, before her wedding to Britain’s Prince William at Westminster Abbey on April 29.


Armed police officers patrol outside The Goring hotel in London April 28, 2011. Kate Middleton and her family will stay at the hotel Thursday, before her wedding to Britain’s Prince William at Westminster Abbey on April 29.


Britain has withdrawn the royal wedding invitation to Syria, with the support of Buckingham Palace, after a violent crackdown against pro-democracy supporters, a Foreign Office spokesman said today.

The invitation was rescinded on the eve of Friday’s wedding between Prince William, the second-in-line to the British throne, and his long-term girlfriend Kate Middleton, following criticism from opposition politicians and human rights groups.

“You may not want to see the pictures of repression in Syria at the same time as the picture of the Syrian ambassador happily being greeted at the wedding,” Human Rights Watch senior legal adviser Clive Baldwin said.



He said Britain should make clear it opposed human rights abuses to avoid being seen as condoning repressive regimes, especially as the eyes of the world would be on the country at this time.


Human rights groups are unhappy that invitations have been sent to Saudi Arabia, while on Sunday, Bahrain’s crown prince said he would not attend because of unrest in the Gulf Arab kingdom.

The Foreign Office said those countries with which Britain has normal diplomatic relations had been invited, and that “while we have strong disagreements with many of them this remains the case.”

Human rights campaigner Peter Tatchell, who held a demonstration outside Buckingham Palace today, said it was “time Buckingham Palace stopped playing diplomatic niceties”.

“We can have diplomatic relations with these countries but there is no obligation to reward their regimes with seats of honour in Westminster Abbey,” he said.

Opposition Labour politicians complained that representatives for Syria and other countries criticised for their human rights records had been invited, but former Labour prime ministers Tony Blair and Gordon Brown were not.

Human rights groups have estimated that at least 400 civilians have been shot dead in Syria during the month-long demonstrations.

Britain summoned the Syrian ambassador Sami Khiyami to the Foreign Office on Wednesday to condemn the “unacceptable use of force” against protesters.

A day later, under intense media pressure, it rescinded the wedding invitation saying the Foreign Office and Buckingham Palace shared the view that it was “not considered appropriate” for the ambassador to attend.

Khiyami later told BBC radio: “I find it a bit embarrassing but I do not consider it as a matter that would jeopardise any ongoing relations and discussions with the British government.”

Marrakesh cafe 'suicide bombing' kills 15 people - Raw Video: Explosion Blasts Moroccan Cafe

A massive bombing tore through a tourist cafe in the bustling heart of Marrakech's old quarter Thursday, killing at least 11 foreigners and three Moroccans in the country's deadliest attack in eight years. ...The UN Security Council and UN leader Ban Ki-moon issued statements condemning the "heinous" bomb attack in the Moroccan city of Marrakesh on Thursday which killed 14 people. The 15-nation Security Council said in a statement it ..






Tornadoes, storms rip through US South, 185 dead

Overnight tornadoes leaves part of Pratt City, a suburb of Birmingham, Alabama, in ruins April 28, 2011. Devastating storms and tornadoes raked though the US South, killing at least 185 people as they ripped houses to rubble, flipped cars and uprooted trees and power lines, officials said today.

Devastating storms and tornadoes raked though the US South, killing at least 185 people as they ripped houses to rubble, flipped cars and uprooted trees and power lines, officials said today.

In the deadliest series of storms in nearly four decades in the United States, 128 people were killed in Alabama, the worst-hit state.

In Mississippi, 32 were killed, while 10 people died in Georgia and 11 in Arkansas. Louisiana and Tennessee also reported deaths as the clusters of powerful tornadoes and storms tore a swathe of destruction from west to east.







Some of the worst devastation occurred yesterday in Alabama, where a massive 1.6km-wide tornado slammed into Tuscaloosa, home to the University of Alabama, killing at least 15 people, including some students.

Tuscaloosa resident Jannie Ross said she and her family took shelter in the basement of their home when the tornado struck.

“We could hear debris hitting the side of our house, glass breaking and the train sound often attributed to big storms such as these,” she told the University of Alabama newspaper, The Crimson White.

“We could hear it destroying everything outside.”

US President Barack Obama declared a state of emergency for the state and ordered federal aid.

“Our hearts go out to all those who have been affected by this devastation and (we) stand ready to continue to help the people of Alabama,” Obama said in a message on Twitter today.

The storms also forced the Tennessee Valley Authority to close three nuclear reactors at a power plant in Alabama and knocked out 25 high-voltage power lines. Hundreds of thousands of homes have lost power.

“We have never experienced such a major weather event in our history,” said the Tennessee Valley Authority, a US-owned company that provides electricity to 9 million people in seven states.

Alabama Governor Robert Bentley declared a state of emergency and said he was deploying 2,000 National Guardsmen. Governors in Arkansas, Mississippi and Tennessee also declared states of emergency.

“We’re in a search and rescue mode. We’re making sure that those that may be out there that are trapped, that we have not found, we are trying to find them,” Bentley told CNN.

“There has been massive devastation across northern Alabama. These long-track tornadoes really tear up the landscape as well as homes,” he said.

Tornadoes are a regular feature of life in the US South and Midwest, but they are rarely so devastating.

Images from Tuscaloosa, a town of around 95,000 in the west-central part of the state, showed widespread damage.

“Everybody says it (a tornado) sounds like a train and I started to hear the train,” Anthony Foote, a resident of Tuscaloosa whose house was badly damaged, said. “I ran and jumped into the tub and the house started shaking. Then glass started shattering.”

The campus of the University of Alabama, home of the famous Crimson Tide football team, was not badly damaged but some students were killed off campus, Bentley said.

Damage in Alabama was spread over a wide area through the north and central part of the state, said Jennifer Ardis, Bentley’s press secretary.

The highest toll was in Franklin County in the rural northwest part of the state where 18 people died, according to figures from the Alabama Emergency Management Agency.

Eleven people died in Jefferson County, home to Birmingham, the state’s largest city, the agency figures showed.

Authorities in Alabama and Mississippi said they expect the death toll to rise as emergency workers attempt rescues and recovery in the storm’s wake.

William and Kate ‘deeply touched’ by well-wishers




Prince William and his bride-to-be Kate Middleton said they were deeply touched by the outpouring of affection sparked by their wedding which will take place tomorrow amid pomp and pageantry in Westminster Abbey.

Their message of thanks to well-wishers worldwide came as details were released today of the wedding service that will combine the ancient traditions of the monarchy with a sense of modernity to reflect the times.






In the service, Middleton will not promise to “obey” William as part of her wedding vows in front of a congregation gathering royals, politicians, celebrities and friends at which his mother the late Princess Diana will be conspicuous by her absence.

“We are both so delighted that you are able to join us in celebrating what we hope will be one of the happiest days of our lives,” William, the second in line to the throne, and Kate wrote in a statement printed in an official souvenir programme.

“The affection shown to us by so many people during our engagement has been incredibly moving, and has touched us both deeply. We would like to take this opportunity to thank everyone most sincerely for their kindness,” they said in the programme released today.

The music for the service reflects much of the couple’s planning for the event which will include Welsh hymns illustrating their connection to Wales. William’s father Prince Charles, the future king, is the Prince of Wales.

“The music has a largely British theme. The couple have put considerable thought into selecting the music, and their choices blend traditional music with some newly commissioned pieces,” William’s office said in a statement.

This morning, Middleton, 29, along with William’s younger brother and best man Prince Harry but not her future husband had a final wedding rehearsal at the abbey, accompanied by some of her family, bridesmaids and page boys.

William, now 28, was 15 when Diana, Princess of Wales, was killed in a car crash in Paris at the end of August 1997. William and his brother Prince Harry walked behind their mother’s cortege at her funeral.

The funeral service for Diana, where Elton John sang “Candle in the Wind”, took place in the abbey which has been the coronation church since William the Conqueror was crowned there in 1066 and is the final resting place for 17 monarchs.

Across central London, preparations are well under way with flags and bunting in the red, white and blue of Britain’s “Union Jack” flag fluttering across buildings and shops. Similar scenes are being echoed across cities, towns and villages across the country where about 5,500 street parties will be held.

There has been huge global media interest, particularly in the United States, with a mass of cameras and journalists joining royal fans outside the abbey and Queen Elizabeth’s Buckingham Palace residence in central London.

The British government has said the royal wedding could attract a global TV audience of some two billion people.

“America and the world is really excited about a piece of great news,” said Linda Bell Blue, executive producer of US entertainment news programme Entertainment Tonight, who is heading up a team of 70 staff for the wedding.

VisitBritain, the national tourism agency, is predicting an extra 600,000 tourists in the capital on the day, meaning there would be a total of some 1.1 million visitors with 40 per cent of those coming from abroad.

Those invited to the wedding also include colleagues as well as foreign dignitaries. The decision to invite Syria’s ambassador has led to some criticism in the media given the bloody crackdown on pro-democracy protests in his country.

Britain has said it would work with other countries to push for sanctions against Syria’s leadership if it continued to use violence to quell protests.

“Those countries with which we have normal diplomatic relations and ambassadors in London are invited to the wedding, and while we have strong disagreements with many of them this remains the case,” a Foreign Office source said.

William goes on a final walkabout as a single man as he greets his fans on the eve of his wedding

* There's no room left near the Abbey for people wanting to get the first glimpse of the married couple
* Camilla went out to meet people waiting outside Clarence House earlier in the day

Prince William delighted thousands of well-wishers in The Mall last night as he staged an impromptu walkabout.

Joined by his brother Harry, the beaming prince stunned die-hard fans when he appeared from Clarence House at about 8.30pm to thank them for their support.

A few burst into tears and a sea of hands rose up, desperate for the chance to shake hands with the prince and to wish him luck before the big day.

 Union Flag and George Cross flag bunting hangs outside the Lamb and Flag pub in central London

 Tornado GR4 aircraft take off from RAF Coningsby station in Lincolnshire for a fly-past rehearsal

 Typhoon (top and bottom) and Tornado GR4 (left and right) aircraft rehearse their fly-past for the Royal wedding


 Carnival: Campers set up trellis tables and passed round sandwiches to get through the cold night
Cold time: The royal watchers had camped out all night in a bid to get the best spot to see the event
Suitably attired: One supporter sports a suit made from pictures of the Royal family while, right,  one wonders if this fan already wearing a ring on that finger - there'll still be one unmarried Prince in town after tomorrow's festivities



 Royal watchers wearing tiaras talk amongst the tents outside the entrance the historic church
Nice lie in: A man sleeps in his open tent covered in a Union Flag duvet


Royal fever: People camping in tents opposite Westminster Abbey have assured themselves a good









 Tired of the wedding festivities already? Two boys catch up on sleep on the pavement outside Westminster Abbey


 Best man: Prince Harry joined his brother on the stroll near Clarence House

 The happy prince: Prince William greets well-wishers along The Mall ahead of his wedding

 Focus on the groom: William is captured on camera by a well-wisher
casual stroll: Prince Harry greets some fans - and William looked relaxed as he cracked jokes with the crowd





 Meet and Greet: Camilla Duchess of Cornwall stepped out to meet people on the Mall on the eve of the wedding


 Oh, what a knight: Colin Bickers walked 55 miles from his home town of Worthing in his full suit of armor for the wedding - raising money for charity along the way



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