Large crowds gather outside church for King Charles royal visit as more than a dozen protesters rally

It is not the first time a royal visit from the King has prompted protests.

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Protesters have gathered outside a Church in North Sydney ahead of the arrival of King Charles and Queen Camilla. More than a dozen anti-monarchy demonstrators have been spotted, with a megaphone used to chant slogans while others held banners reading “Decolonise”, and signs saying “Empire built on genocide. Not our king”.

King Charles and Queen Camilla will attend a church service as they begin three days of official events in Australia after resting at a harbourside mansion to recover from their long flight. Know the news with the 7NEWS app: Download today The service at St Thomas’ Anglican Church in North Sydney on Sunday marks the beginning of a carefully planned, whistlestop royal tour during which the pair will travel between the NSW capital and Canberra. It is not the first time a royal visit from the King has prompted protests.



Australian barrister, David Kang, famously shot two blank shots from a starting pistol at the then Prince of Wales in 1994, in protest to the treatment of Cambodian asylum seekers. King Charles has visited Australia 16 times, including two terms at a remote boarding campus of Geelong Grammar as a teenager, but this is the first trip since his coronation in 2022. The itinerary, which was tightened after the King’s cancer diagnosis in February, will see the royal couple attend a range of events at iconic sites including the Australian War Memorial, federal parliament and the Sydney Opera House.

—With AAP.