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| Prince William and his wife Kate explored Lahore's famous Badshahi Mosque -- one of the world's largest |
A fierce storm in Islamabad forced a plane carrying Britain's Prince William and his wife Kate to abandon two landings before returning to Lahore late Thursday, reporters travelling with them said, in a dramatic end to a day of cracking cricket balls and touring the towering historic Badshahi Mosque.
The
Voyager, a British Royal Air Force jet transporting the couple during their
five-day tour of Pakistan, was caught in one of the thunderous storms that
periodically rock the capital in October.
"The
pilot circled for an hour but the lightening - and turbulence - was so bad we
had to fly back," tweeted the Daily Mail's royal correspondent Rebecca
English, who was on board the plane.
"Few
of us have experienced turbulence as bad as that," she added.
"If
I'm honest ... that was the most nervous I've ever felt in a plane," added
ITV royal correspondent Chris Ship.
Daily
Telegraph correspondent Ben Farmer said the pilot had tried to land twice, once
at a military base in the garrison city of Rawalpindi adjacent to Islamabad,
and once at Islamabad International before abandoning the attempt and returning
to Lahore, some 270 kilometres (170 miles) flying distance away.
However all
on board appeared to be safe, with English tweeting that Prince William -- himself
a pilot -- had joked with the press pack that he had been flying.
English
said it was unclear when they would be able to take off again. There was
no immediate statement from Kensington Palace.
Sporting
visitors
The mid-air
flight drama came after the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge had spent the day
exploring Lahore, Pakistan's cultural capital.
The royal
couple kicked off their fourth day in Pakistan with a visit to the SOS
Children's Village orphanage, where Kate gave a brief speech along with a short
greeting in Urdu and celebrated children's birthdays.
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The royal
couple have spent much of the trip promoting
various causes, from girls'
education to conservation
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"Earlier
this year I talked about the fact that it takes a village to raise a child. The
village we've seen here today is the best representation of that ideal that I
could have possibly imagined," she said.
The Duke
and Duchess later took to the crease at the National Cricket Academy, where
they both hit a few runs as they played alongside a host of current and former
cricket stars, including current bowling coach Waqar Younis.
After an outfit
change, the duo headed to Lahore's famous Badshahi Mosque -- one of the world's
largest.
William
sported a cream-coloured linen suit and Kate donned a light green shalwar
kameez, wrapping her hair in a matching headscarf and walking in stockinged feet
to show her respect.
William's
mother, the late Princess Diana, caused a controversy at the same mosque in
1991 when she wore an above-the-knee dress, sparking a backlash from some
Muslim leaders who argued she should have covered up.
The couple
rounded off the trip with a visit to the Shaukat Khanum Memorial Cancer
Hospital, founded by Prime Minister Imran Khan, where Diana is remembered
fondly for helping raise money for the facility in the 1990s.
Kensington
Palace has called the Cambridges' five-day trip, which ends Friday, their
"most complex" tour to date as the royals seek to boost ties between
Britain and the second largest country in the Commonwealth.
The couple
have spent much of the trip promoting various causes, from girls' education to
conservation and climate change awareness as they criss-crossed the country.
Security
has improved dramatically since the army intensified a crackdown on militant groups
in 2015, with several countries changing their travel warnings for Pakistan as
a result, and Islamabad eager to promote both tourism and foreign investment.
There are
promising signs, such as the British Airways return earlier this year after
more than a decade, and the slow but steady revival of international cricket.


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