Eswatini Daily News

Cheeky baby snatches handbag from British royal Kate

Lucy Williams, from Aberfan, holds her son Daniel Williams, one, as he takes the handbag of Catherine, Princess of Wales, during her visit with her husband the Prince of Wales, to the Aberfan memorial garden, to pay their respects to those who lost their lives during the Aberfan disaster on October 21, 1966, in Aberfan, Wales, Britain. Picture date: Friday April 28, 2023. Ben Birchall/Pool via REUTERS

LONDON (Reuters) – British royal Kate was briefly dispossessed of her handbag on Friday by a baby she met while greeting wellwishers on a visit to Wales.

One-year-old Daniel Williams took hold of the small black bag from Kate, wife of the heir to the throne William, and started playing with it as she chatted to his mother Lucy.

Lucy Williams, from Aberfan, holds her son Daniel Williams, one, as he plays with the handbag of Catherine, Princess of Wales, which he took from her during her visit with Britain’s Prince William, Prince of Wales to the Aberfan memorial garden, to pay their respects to those who lost their lives during the Aberfan disaster on October 21, 1966, in Aberfan, Wales, Britain. Picture: Ben Birchall/Pool via REUTERS

Lucy, who was holding her son, told him to give the bag back and tried to wrestle it from him before Kate indicated he could keep hold of it while she greeted other members of the public.

Read More: Meghan hits out at UK media over King Charles’s letters

“Don’t eat it now,” Lucy told her son while Kate’s back was turned.

Lucy Williams, from Aberfan, holds her son Daniel Williams, one, as he takes the handbag of Catherine, Princess of Wales, during her visit with her husband the Prince of Wales, to the Aberfan memorial garden, to pay their respects to those who lost their lives during the Aberfan disaster on October 21, 1966, in Aberfan, Wales, Britain. Picture: Ben Birchall/Pool via REUTERS

The encounter occurred on a visit by Kate and William, the Prince and Princess of Wales, to the village of Aberfan to commemorate a disaster where a coal-tip landslide destroyed a primary school in 1966, killing 144 people.

A Kensington Palace spokesperson said the couple “recognise the huge significance of this historic disaster to the people of Wales and wanted to pay their respects to those whose lives were lost as well as to meet people living in Aberfan now.”

Exit mobile version