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Queen on last day of Uganda trip Pupil show ends Royal Uganda trip
(about 4 hours later)
The Queen and Duke of Edinburgh are to watch a performance by primary school pupils on the last day of their state visit to Uganda. The Queen has ended her state visit to Uganda with an enthusiastic reception at a school concert in her honour.
The royal couple will tour the Kitante School and meet children and staff before the Monarch unveils a plaque to commemorate her visit. Hundreds of youngsters greeted the Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh with cheering and clapping when they visited Kitante School in Kampala.
The Prince of Wales and Duchess of Cornwall, who are also in Uganda, will visit the source of the Nile. Their four-day visit has been warmly welcomed by Ugandans who greeted their arrival in their tens of thousands.
Fifty leaders are gathered for the biennial heads of government meeting. The Queen also presided over a Commonwealth heads of government summit being staged in the capital.
The Queen last visited Uganda in 1954, eight years before the former British colony gained independence. Stilt dance
Formally opening the three-day summit on Friday, she said the importance everyone placed on dialogue and "respect for fundamental human rights" put the Commonwealth in a strong position to lead. During her visit to Kitante school, the Queen was shown crafts by Ugandan tribes and a display of artwork by pupils - including a pencil portrait of her.
Her comments were made after Pakistan was suspended from the Commonwealth over its imposition of emergency rule. The royal couple then watched a performance by students, including singing, poetry and a stilt-walking dance.
Violent clashes The summit has been marred by violent clashes
Prince Charles is visiting Uganda for the first time. It is also his first visit to a Commonwealth heads of government meeting overseas. Formally opening the summit on Friday, the Queen said the importance everyone placed on dialogue and "respect for fundamental human rights" put the Commonwealth in a strong position to lead.
Earlier in the trip she toured a specialist Aids centre where she publicly acknowledged the plight of sufferers by shaking the hand of a man with HIV.
Meanwhile the Prince of Wales and Duchess of Cornwall, who are also in Uganda on an official visit, are due to visit the source of the Nile.
Banquet
Prince Charles is visiting the country for the first time. It is also his first time at a Commonwealth heads of government meeting overseas.
He and Camilla will visit a local school before heading to Jinja on the banks of Lake Victoria to visit the source of the Nile.He and Camilla will visit a local school before heading to Jinja on the banks of Lake Victoria to visit the source of the Nile.
They will then return to the capital for their last official engagement, a banquet hosted by Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni.They will then return to the capital for their last official engagement, a banquet hosted by Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni.
The visit marks the first time in 33 years that Charles has joined the Queen on a foreign trip in an official capacity.The visit marks the first time in 33 years that Charles has joined the Queen on a foreign trip in an official capacity.
It has been marred by violent clashes in Kampala between police and opposition-led demonstrators who denounced the Queen for meeting President Museveni, who they say abuses human rights. The summit has been overshadowed by the suspension of Pakistan from the Commonwealth over its imposition of emergency rule.
It has also been marred by violent clashes in Kampala between police and opposition-led demonstrators who denounced the Queen for meeting President Museveni, who, they say, is guilty of human rights abuses.