Unwell King Charles absent, but still very much in the picture

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Britain's King Charles (left) holding an audience with Alexander Williams, the High Commissioner of Jamaica, at Buckingham Palace, on March 7, 2024.

Britain's King Charles (left) meeting Mr Alexander Williams, the High Commissioner of Jamaica, at Buckingham Palace, on March 7, 2024.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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LONDON - Britain's King Charles will on March 11 miss the first major royal event since his cancer diagnosis, but there is no sign of the monarch vanishing from public view, let alone contemplating stepping down from his role, experts say.

King Charles, 75, has been forced to postpone all public engagements since Buckingham Palace revealed just over a month ago

he was to undergo treatment for an unspecified form of cancer.

The news shocked the nation coming less than 18 months after

he became king on the death of his mother

in September 2022, following her 70-year reign.

His absence will be keenly felt on March 11 when

he misses events to celebrate the Commonwealth,

a club of 56 countries which evolved out of the British Empire.

Commonwealth Day, which sees senior royals attend a service at London's Westminster Abbey where

he was crowned in 2023,

is an important annual fixture in the royal calendar as Charles heads the organisation which was very dear to his mother.

Still working

Although he will not be there in person, with his wife Queen Camilla leading the way instead, King Charles will deliver a video message, the latest demonstration of how he is still carrying out his official state duties.

Since his illness was disclosed, he has been shown hosting Prime Minister Rishi Sunak for their regular meeting, and in the last week was pictured greeting foreign dignitaries and on a video call with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

"We're in a sort of similar situation, rather, to the one the queen was in at the start of the Covid pandemic, where she was trying to juggle her duties as monarch while being detached from the public," said royal commentator and Charles biographer Robert Hardman.

"And that's really the model. We'll see plenty of the king. We'll hear from him, but it'll just be by remote video conferencing rather than in the flesh."

Where King Charles has broken with usual royal protocol though, is in his willingness to give some insight into his health, an indication of his desire for a more open, less formal monarchy, commentators say.

Prior to the cancer news, he had also disclosed he would undergo a "corrective procedure" in hospital for an enlarged prostate, a benign condition common among men over 50.

“I think it does mark a departure from the tone in the style of his mother, the late queen,” said Professor Anna Whitelock, an expert in the history of monarchy at London’s City University.

“On some level, he had to say something. But of course, he didn’t have to disclose that it was actually a cancer diagnosis.”

Britain's royals usually do not disclose details of illnesses, regarding all medical issues as private, and little was said about a condition which kept the late queen from public duties towards the end of her reign.

King Charles, on the other hand, had been keen to share details of his prostate treatment to encourage other men experiencing symptoms to have a medical check, aides said.

However, there is one issue on which experts are agreed: He will follow his mother's example and reject the idea of stepping down as king in favour of his son, Prince William.

Abdication is not uncommon among other European monarchies – Queen Margrethe II of Denmark

handed over the throne to her son

King Frederik X in January after a 52-year reign - but no one expects King Charles to follow suit.

"There's no question of an abdication," said Mr Hardman, while Prof Whitelock said the king would want to protect his son William and his three children from being in the limelight for as long as possible.

"He wants to rule till his death. He's waited for this role. I'm sure he's had big, big ideas in mind, things he wants to do as king," said Ms Stephanie Petit, royal editor of US magazine People.

"And for this to just come so soon after he has started his reign must be devastating for him." REUTERS

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