Kate Middleton and Prince William are travelling 2000km around the British Isles to thank front-line workers for their contributions during the Covid-19 crisis.
Video / AP
A national train tour by Prince William and his wife Kate has received a frosty welcome from leaders in Wales and Scotland, with one Welsh official saying he would rather "no one was having unnecessary visits" during the coronavirus pandemic.
William and Kate arrived in the Welsh capital of Cardiffon Tuesday for the final day of their three-day royal train tour, meant to spread Christmas cheer and thank medical staff and other frontline employees for their hard, dangerous work during the pandemic.
But Welsh Health Minister Vaughan Gething said he wasn't "particularly bothered or interested" when asked on BBC radio if he thought the couple should travel to Wales when the region has been seeing high Covid-19 infections.
Residents wave to Britain's Prince William and Kate, Duchess of Cambridge as they visit Cleeve Court Care Home in Bath. Photo / Paul Grover, Pool via AP
Asked if it was the right moment for the royal couple to visit, Gething said Tuesday: "I'd rather that no one was having unnecessary visits. And people always have divisive views about the monarchy, but their visit isn't an excuse for people to say that they are confused about what they are being asked to do."
On Monday, Scottish leader Nicola Sturgeon suggested that William and Kate travelled to the Scottish capital of Edinburgh despite their office being made aware of coronavirus restrictions for those wanting to cross the border.
Prince William and Kate toast marshmallows at Cardiff Castle in Wales while some critics skewered the tour. Photo / Jonathan Buckmaster, Pool via AP
Royal officials have said the visits were planned in consultation with the Scottish and Welsh governments, and that William and Kate were allowed to travel across the border because they were working.
Officials at No.10 Downing Street initially declined to address the matter, saying the tour was "a matter for the palace". But later Tuesday, Prime Minister Boris Johnson backed the tour when his office issued a statement calling the trip "highly valuable".
UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson preferred to stay out of the 'matter for the palace' but eventually issued a statement supporting the tour. Photo / Matt Dunham, AP
"The tour will be a welcome morale boost to frontline workers who have done so much during the pandemic," the statement said.
Wales and Scotland have their own devolved governments and different sets of coronavirus restrictions from England even though they are all part of the United Kingdom. Welsh and Scottish officials have discouraged people from the rest of the UK from traveling to their regions without a reasonable excuse in a bid to reduce the virus's spread.
Britain has Europe's deadliest Covid-19 outbreak, with more than 61,000 reported dead.
It’s been an Onslow signature menu item since day one. Now, Josh Emett’s famous crayfish eclair has clawed its way into the Iconic Auckland Eats Top 100 list. Video / Alyse Wright