King Charles III is set to resume his international duties next year as he adapts to life with cancer. He plans to undertake official foreign Royal trips during the traditional spring and autumn seasons, subject to medical approval.
This follows a successful tour of Australia and Samoa with the Queen, which a senior Buckingham Palace official said the King was "determined" to carry out and a "perfect tonic" for him.
The official revealed: "We’re now working on a pretty normal looking full overseas tour programme for next year, which is a high for us to end on, to know that we can be thinking in those terms." While no specific health updates or treatment details have been released, the announcement of future travels indicates that the King's condition is being effectively managed. READ MORE: Body found at Ashton Canal near Etihad Stadium - latest updates The recent tour was said to have lifted the King's "his spirits, his mood and his recovery," with the official noting that Charles "genuinely loved" the experience and "genuinely thrived" on the programme. "In that sense, the tour, despite its demands, has been the perfect tonic," he said.
Today (October 26), in the Samoan village of Siumu Charles and Camilla were given pink garland necklaces and seated on beige leather thrones.