Source:
https://scmp.com/news/world/africa/article/3030742/emotional-prince-harry-retraces-princess-dianas-footsteps-former
World/ Africa

‘Emotional’ Prince Harry retraces Princess Diana’s footsteps in former Angola minefield

  • Diana’s walked through area to highlight landmine problem in 1997, just months before her death
  • More than 1,600 people have been injured by landmines in Angola between the start of civil war in 1975 and 2015
Britain’s Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex, visits a working demining field with the Halo Trust in Angola on Friday. Photo: Reuters

Britain’s Prince Harry on Friday paid an “emotional” visit to a street in Angola that was once a minefield visited by his mother Diana shortly before her death.

Princess Diana walked across a cleared minefield near the central city of Huambo in 1997 to highlight the plight of a country that remains plagued by landmines 17 years after the end of its civil war.

Just months later Diana was killed in a car crash in Paris, when Harry was 12.

“It has been emotional retracing my mother’s steps along this street 22 years on,” said Harry, standing on Huambo’s now-paved Princess Diana Street.

Diana, Princess of Wales, with Sandra Tigica, 13, at the orthopaedic workshop in Neves Mendinha, near Launda, Angola in January 1997. Photo: TNS
Diana, Princess of Wales, with Sandra Tigica, 13, at the orthopaedic workshop in Neves Mendinha, near Launda, Angola in January 1997. Photo: TNS

“Being here on this transformed and bustling street … shows the tremendous impact that clearing landmines has on communities and their futures.”

Diana drew attention to the more than one million landmines planted during Angola’s 27-year war, which started after independence from Portugal in 1975.

“There are still more than 1,000 minefields in this beautiful country that remain to be cleared,” said Harry, questioning whether “that could still be the case” if Diana were alive.

“I’m pretty sure she would have seen it through,” he added.

Earlier on Friday, Harry – donning an almost exact replica of the protective visor and bulletproof vest worn by his mother – detonated a mine in Luengue-Luiana National Park, 1,000km (600 miles) southeast of Huambo.

The prince, also known as the Duke of Sussex, spent the night in the park. He called on Angolans to protect “the unique wildlife that relies on the beautiful Cuito River that I slept beside”.

As a conservation advocate, he touched on ongoing efforts to encourage the return of wild animals killed by militia and landmines during the war.

“When this great wilderness rebounds and the land is regenerated,” said Harry, “wildlife can and will return to Angola.”

Prince Harry talks with children during a visit to the Centre for Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, which will be renamed the Princess Diana Centre for Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, in Huambo, Angola, on Friday. Photo: EPA-EFE
Prince Harry talks with children during a visit to the Centre for Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, which will be renamed the Princess Diana Centre for Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, in Huambo, Angola, on Friday. Photo: EPA-EFE

He added that elephants would “be able to naturally migrate across borders”, easing pressure on neighbouring countries.

Botswana – which shares a border with Angola – is currently struggling with a large elephant population.

Later on Friday, Prince Harry visited a recently-renovated orthopaedic hospital in Huambo named after his mother.

More than 1,600 people have been injured by landmines in Angola between the start of the war in 1975 and 2015, according to British charity Halo Trust. Most casualties occurred in 2002 and 2003, when Angolans returned to their homes after peace was declared.

Diana was famously photographed meeting some of the victims during her visit.

“If an international ban on mines can be secured it means, looking far ahead, that the world may be a safer place for this generation’s grandchildren,” said the princess at the time.

Harry – Diana’s second son and sixth in line to the British throne – is on a 10-day tour of southern Africa, which he started in Cape Town with his wife Meghan, the Duchess of Sussex, and four-month old son Archie.

The duchess and Archie remained in South Africa while the Duke toured conservation and HIV prevention projects around the region.

Prince Harry sits beneath the Diana Tree in Huambo, Angola, on Friday. Photo: Reuters
Prince Harry sits beneath the Diana Tree in Huambo, Angola, on Friday. Photo: Reuters

He visited Botswana before Angola, and is expected to fly to Malawi on Saturday.

The family will reunite in Johannesburg next week and complete the trip together before flying back on October 2.

Prince Harry last travelled to Angola in 2013 to witness the clearing of a minefield organised by the Halo Trust, which was championed by Diana.