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After 22 years ,Prince Harry meets Sandra Thijika in Angola

3 years ago
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  • Sandra Thijika, who was pictured sitting on Princess Diana’s knee, said meeting her made her feel ‘complete’
  • And when she met Prince Harry she described the encounter as a continuation of a long and beautiful story 
  • Harry ended his visit to Angola by meeting Ms Thijika, 38, a landmine victim who has to use a prosthetic leg
  • She was famously pictured with Diana sitting under a fig tree in an orthopaedic workshop in Luanda in 1997
  • Princess Diana cried after watching Ms Thijika being measured for a new prosthetic when she was just a girl
  • Ms Thijika revealed to Duke of Sussex she had five children, and ‘I have a daughter I named her after Diana’

The Duke of Sussex has met a landmine victim who famously brought Diana to tears 22 years ago during trip to Angola – as she revealed she named a daughter after the princess.

Sandra Thijika, who was pictured sitting on Diana’s knee, described the experience of meeting the royal as making her feel ‘complete’.

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And when she met Prince Harry she described the encounter as a continuation of a long and beautiful story.

Harry ended his visit to Angola by meeting Ms Thijika, 38, a landmine victim who was famously pictured with his mother sitting under a fig tree in an orthopaedic workshop in Luanda in 1997.

The princess had not only walked through a partially cleared minefield in Angola to raise awareness about the issue of the weapons, but spent time with people maimed by the munitions laid during a bloody civil war.

Ms Thijika said after chatting to Harry: ‘I think I met Princess Diana on a Tuesday, she came to the centre and she wanted to see how a change of prosthetic limb was done.

Sandra Thijika, who was pictured sitting on Diana's knee, described meeting Prince Harry (pictured) as a continuation of a long and beautiful story

Sandra Thijika, who was pictured sitting on Diana’s knee, described meeting Prince Harry (pictured) as a continuation of a long and beautiful story

Ms Thijika (pictured with Diana) described the experience of meeting Princess Diana in 1997 as making her feel 'complete'

Ms Thijika (pictured with Diana) described the experience of meeting Princess Diana in 1997 as making her feel ‘complete’

The Prince shakes hands with Ms Thijika

The Duke of Sussex makes a speech during a reception at the British Ambassadors Residence in Luanda, Angola

Ms Thijika (left with Prince Harry) said after chatting to Harry (right during a speech): ‘I think I met Princess Diana on a Tuesday, she came to the centre and she wanted to see how a change of prosthetic limb was done’

The princess (pictured in Angola in 1997) had not only walked through a partially cleared minefield in Angola to raise awareness about the issue of the weapons, but spent time with people maimed by the munitions laid during a bloody civil war

The princess (pictured in Angola in 1997) had not only walked through a partially cleared minefield in Angola to raise awareness about the issue of the weapons, but spent time with people maimed by the munitions laid during a bloody civil war

‘At that time I was very small, I was a very tiny girl and they started measuring my knee so they could see how the prosthetic would fit.

‘Princess Diana was watching this process and she started crying as she watched me getting measured for a new prosthetic.

‘After they measured my knee we went outside and we sat by a fig tree and she was speaking to me and I felt very happy, I felt very complete to have the attention of a princess.

Prince Harry says it’s ’emotional to walk in his mother’s footsteps
The Duke of Sussex takes a moment to sit and reflect on the emotional occasion in Angola (pictured) before speaking to locals about the 'wonderful' work done to make the area safe

The Duke of Sussex takes a moment to sit and reflect on the emotional occasion in Angola (pictured) before speaking to locals about the ‘wonderful’ work done to make the area safe

‘It was an honour to be sitting next to a princess.’

Ms Thijika was a special guest at a reception hosted by Jessica Hand, Britain’s Ambassador to Angola, at her official residence in Luanda.

Speaking about Angola’s £48million pledge to invest in the work of the landmine clearing charity Halo Trust in the country, the duke told Ms Thijika: ‘I know you will never get your leg back, but I hope with the president’s contribution…you will have some peace of mind.’

The mother told the duke she had five children, and the royal seemed taken aback and asked for their ages and she told him, speaking through an interpreter: ‘I have a daughter I named her after Diana.’

Princess Diana

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Earlier today the Duke of Sussex walks through a minefield in Dirico, Angola, during a visit to see the work of landmine clearance charity the Halo Trust

Earlier today the Duke of Sussex walks through a minefield in Dirico, Angola, during a visit to see the work of landmine clearance charity the Halo Trust

Locals watched on as Harry retraced his mothers steps - only this time he walked along pavement and past buildings, rather than through the dangerous zone in Angola his mother encountered

Locals watched on as Harry retraced his mothers steps – only this time he walked along pavement and past buildings, rather than through the dangerous zone in Angola his mother encountered

Harry was highlighting the ongoing threat of the munitions in Angola, the same nation Diana visited in 1997 to urge the world to ban the weapons

Harry was highlighting the ongoing threat of the munitions in Angola, the same nation Diana visited in 1997 to urge the world to ban the weapons

The Princess of Wales was famously pictured walking through the minefield in Angola during a trip to Africa in 1997

The Princess of Wales was famously pictured walking through the minefield in Angola during a trip to Africa in 1997

Harry sounded a positive note, telling her: ‘Your children will be growing up to your age and there won’t be any landmines.’

In response to Harry’s pledge, the 38-year-old said: ‘I’m very happy to hear him say that, it feels like the work in Angola will continue and we will be landmine free.’

She said about meeting Harry: ‘This is a long story and this is a beautiful story because I’ve come out of the province to meet Diana’s son, so this is putting the focus on all of us who have physical disabilities.

‘So it’s good for Angola that the world can see we need help that we need help and much can be done for us.’

Princess Diana and Prince Harry’s Angola visits side by side
Prince Harry was today pictured retracing his mother's steps in Angola where she once visited a minefield in 1997. He is pictured in walking where she walked when the area was littered with explosives before it was transformed into a 'vibrant' community. The tree in the background was named after Diana

Prince Harry was today pictured retracing his mother’s steps in Angola where she once visited a minefield in 1997. He is pictured in walking where she walked when the area was littered with explosives before it was transformed into a ‘vibrant’ community. The tree in the background was named after Diana

Prince Harry retraced his late mother’s footsteps in Huambo
The Duke of Sussex also took a moment to sit and reflect on the emotional occasion in Angola, pictured, before speaking to locals about the 'wonderful' work done to make the area safe

The Duke of Sussex also took a moment to sit and reflect on the emotional occasion in Angola, pictured, before speaking to locals about the ‘wonderful’ work done to make the area safe

Harry’s trip was to highlight the ongoing threat of the munitions in Angola.

Some 22 years after his mother walked through the minefield and called for a global ban on mines, he retraced her steps – but walked through what is a very different area to what his mother experienced thanks to the work of landmine clearance charity the Halo Trust.

The minefield that Diana trekked through is now a ‘vibrant’ community with businesses and schools and Harry praised the ‘wonderful transformation’ that had taken place.

He also sat beneath the Diana Tree that is all that remains of the field where his mother was pictured in 1997 as a tribute to her memory and efforts in the area.

It came after Harry, wearing similar body armour Diana wore in 1997, was earlier asked to set off an anti-personnel mine which had been discovered earlier in a partially cleared minefield nearby with a controlled explosion to safely destroy the decades-old weapon.

Near the south-eastern town of Dirico, the Duke, who at 35 is the same age as his mother was when she made her famous visit just months before her death, walked into an area that was once an artillery base for anti-government forces who had mined the position in 2000 before retreating.

In a speech to the local community, Harry said: ‘It has been quite emotional retracing my mother’s steps through these streets 22 years ago and to see the transformation that has taken place from an unsafe and desolate area into a vibrant community with local businesses and colleges.’

Earlier today the Duke of Sussex walks through a minefield in Dirico, Angola, during a visit to see the work of landmine clearance charity the Halo Trust

Earlier today the Duke of Sussex walks through a minefield in Dirico, Angola, during a visit to see the work of landmine clearance charity the Halo Trust

Harry's mother Diana visited a minefield in Angola in January, 1997. The Princess of Wales visited Huambo to bring global attention to the crisis of landmines and the people whose lives were being destroyed

Harry’s mother Diana visited a minefield in Angola in January, 1997. The Princess of Wales visited Huambo to bring global attention to the crisis of landmines and the people whose lives were being destroyed

Locals watched on as Harry retraced his mothers steps - only this time he walked along pavement and past buildings, rather than through the dangerous zone in Angola his mother encountered

Locals watched on as Harry retraced his mothers steps – only this time he walked along pavement and past buildings, rather than through the dangerous zone in Angola his mother encountered

‘This is a wonderful example of how the UK, in partnership with Angola, can address the issue of landmines, bringing prosperity to an area, creating jobs, helping people access education and healthcare and making communities safer.’

He added: ‘The work of de-mining is dangerous, expensive and laborious and I have the utmost admiration and respect for all who do this hazardous work and risk their lives in service for their country.

‘I am incredibly proud, as I know my mother would have been, of the role that the UK has played in this transformation through funding and the expertise brought by UK specialist organisations such as the Halo Trust and Mine Advisory Group (MAG).

‘I also want to acknowledge the commitment and contribution of the international community including Norwegian People’s Aid, Mine Action in Angola and our partners in the US and Japan and many others.

‘But of course none of this progress would have been possible without the spirit and unwavering determination of the Angolan people. The credit goes to you.’

The Duke called for the rest of the world to follow Angola’s example and get rid of the explosives wherever they are.

Harry then visited the Orthopaedic Centre, where he met Ms Thijika.

Recently renovated, it aims to become Angola’s national centre of excellence in orthopaedic care. In a poignant moment, the Duke renamed it the Princess Diana Orthopaedic Centre in honour of his late mother.

Sweet moment Prince Harry fist bumps six-year-old boy in Huambo
Harry stopped to chat to youngsters who were being treated at the centre on Angola

Harry stopped to chat to youngsters who were being treated at the centre on Angola

Justina Cesar, who lost her leg at just three years old when she stepped on a landmine, posed with Harry

Justina Cesar, who lost her leg at just three years old when she stepped on a landmine, posed with Harry

Prince Harry meets Barnaby Jose Mar, six, as he visits the Princess Diana Orthopaedic Centre in Huambo, Angola

Prince Harry meets Barnaby Jose Mar, six, as he visits the Princess Diana Orthopaedic Centre in Huambo, Angola

Harry also visited the Orthopaedic Centre, also visited by his mother in 1997

Harry also visited the Orthopaedic Centre, also visited by his mother in 1997

The Duke of Sussex met patients at the Princess Diana Orthopaedic Centre this afternoon

The Duke of Sussex met patients at the Princess Diana Orthopaedic Centre this afternoon

Recently renovated, the centre aims to become Angola's national centre of excellence in orthopaedic care

Recently renovated, the centre aims to become Angola’s national centre of excellence in orthopaedic care

The Duke of Sussex examines a prosthetic leg as he visits the Princess Diana Orthopaedic Centre in Huamb

The Duke of Sussex examines a prosthetic leg as he visits the Princess Diana Orthopaedic Centre in Huamb

The Duke of Sussex meets Justina Cesar, a landmine victim who lost her right leg at the age of three

The Duke of Sussex meets Justina Cesar, a landmine victim who lost her right leg at the age of three

Prince Harry visits Angola de-mining site retracing Diana’s footsteps

 

Prince Harry speaking in front of the tree named after his mother

+45

Prince Harry met town officials including an interpreter, far right, who helped him speak to locals

The Duke, pictured right with local officials including an interpreter, far right, who helped him speak to locals, made a speech from in front of the tree named for his mother. It was planted in the spot she was pictured in back in 1997.

The Prince told the crowd he believed his mother would have rid Angola of the 1,000 minefields that still remain in the country if she was still alive

The Prince told the crowd he believed his mother would have rid Angola of the 1,000 minefields that still remain in the country if she was still alive

Prince Harry looked downcast at times as he retraced his mother's steps but lauded the Angolan community's efforts to clear landmines

The Duke sat alone beneath the Diana Tree, pictured

Prince Harry looked downcast at times as he retraced his mother’s steps but lauded the Angolan community’s efforts to clear landmines

Prince Harry speaks of L during speech at Huambo minefield

He added: ‘Let us not lose sight of the reality. Twenty-two years ago my mother visited Angola. There are still 1,000 minefields left in this beautiful country that remain to be cleared and I wonder if she were still here whether that would still be the case.

‘I’m pretty sure that she would have seen it [their clearance] through.’

In closing, he added: ‘I call on all those countries that had their names stamped on these weapons but who have not helped in the clear-up to please commit to ensuring we meet our collective goal.

‘Let’s finish what we started, in partnership with landmine clearance organisations, community leaders and private supporters, and redouble our efforts. Let’s consign these weapons to the history books for good.’

The Duke and Duchess of Sussex also posted a poignant message on their Instagram account today, honouring the tireless work of Diana which, ‘helped change the course of history’.

They added: ‘The Duke is humbled to be visiting a place and a community that was so special to his mother, and to recognise her tireless mission as an advocate for all those she felt needed her voice the most, even if the issue was not universally popular.’

Prince Harry pays tribute to Princess Diana for her work in Angola
Some 22 years after his mother Princess Diana walked through the minefield and called for a global ban on mines, Harry followed in her footsteps

Some 22 years after his mother Princess Diana walked through the minefield and called for a global ban on mines, Harry followed in her footsteps

The Duke of Sussex - who has long been behind calls to clear landmines around the world - was then asked to set off an anti-personnel mine

The Duke of Sussex – who has long been behind calls to clear landmines around the world – was then asked to set off an anti-personnel mine

The dusty scrubland was marked with red warning signs showing the skull and crossbones, with the Portuguese words 'Perigo Minas!' and the English translation below – danger mines

The dusty scrubland was marked with red warning signs showing the skull and crossbones, with the Portuguese words ‘Perigo Minas!’ and the English translation below – danger mines

The Duke of Sussex made a speech while visiting the landmine site, praising the clearing efforts by the Halo Trust as helping the community to 'find peace'

The Duke of Sussex made a speech while visiting the landmine site, praising the clearing efforts by the Halo Trust as helping the community to ‘find peace’

The Duke of Sussex watches a controlled explosion in a partially cleared minefield in Dirico

The Duke of Sussex watches a controlled explosion in a partially cleared minefield in Dirico

The area today is totally different to the vegetation that Princess Diana walked through in 1997, pictured

The area today is totally different to the vegetation that Princess Diana walked through in 1997, pictured

Prince Harry follows mum’s steps as he visits Angola de-mining site

Prince Harry first visited Angola for HALO’s 25th Anniversary in 2013. He has since joined the call for Landmine Free 2025 and attended an event at Chatham House in June 2019, to announce a major conservation project in Angola, clearing the Okavango headwaters of landmines.

The Duke of Sussex made a speech while visiting the landmine site today, praising the clearing efforts by the Halo Trust as helping the community to ‘find peace’.

More than 60 million people worldwide still at risk of ‘stealthy killer’ landmines

Princess Diana’s iconic walk through a HALO minefield in Angola in 1997 catapulted the landmine issue to prominence.

Later that year, 122 countries came together to sign the Ottawa Treaty, banning the use of anti-personnel mines.

Since the Treaty was signed, over 51 million stockpiled anti-personnel landmines have been destroyed.

And 29 states have been declared free from landmines – including including Mozambique, once one of the most mined countries in the world.

But 62 states are still contaminated by anti-personnel landmines.

According to Mine Action Review’s analysis, four states are currently assessed to have ‘massive’ (over 100 km2 ) levels of contamination from anti-personnel mines: Afghanistan, Bosnia & Herzegovina, Cambodia and Iraq.

Over 60 million people are still at risk of unexploded bombs, most of them from poor rural communities.

In Cambodia alone, 11 people were killed and dozens injured by landmines in the first half of 2019.

A 2017 report by the Landmine and Cluster Munition Monitor shows casualties more than doubled in from 2015-2017.

There were casualties in 52 states during 2016 with 24 people killed or injured every day – the highest number since 1999.

Some 42% of those killed or injured were children.

According to the report, Angola is not on track to be completed by 2025 and without more funding, will not complete clearance until at least 2046.

In Angola, under-five child mortality is 157 per 10,000 children, the highest in the world.

In Cambodia, over 51,000 people have been killed or maimed by landmines since 1979. Casualty rates from mines and unexploded bombs remain at around 100 per year.

Only three countries (Angola, Oman and Zimbabwe) have Ottawa Treaty deadlines extending as far as 2025, and Iraq is so far the only State Party working towards a deadline beyond then (2028).

Source: Halo Trust 

‘Landmines are an unhealed scar of war. By clearing the landmines we can help this community find peace, and with peace comes opportunity,’ Harry said.

‘Additionally, we can protect the diverse and unique wildlife that relies on the beautiful Kuito river that I slept beside last night.

‘That river and those wildlife are your natural assets and, if looked after, will bring you unlimited opportunities in the conservation-led economy.’

‘It is fitting that this project starts in Dirico, at the convergence of the two rivers that flow from Angola’s islands down to the Okavango Delta,’ the duke continued.

‘These two rivers provide water and life to over a million people downstream and an essential and incredibly delicate habitat for an abundance of wildlife.

‘Just as these rivers extend for miles, so must this project extend far beyond Dirico. Outside the national parks, large parts of this crucial watershed also need to be cleared of land mines.

‘Clearing the full watershed will take an international effort. Everyone who recognises the priceless importance of safeguarding Africa’s most intact natural landscape should commit fully to this mission.’

In 1997, Harry’s mother Princess Diana said: ‘If an international ban on mines can be secured it means, looking far ahead, that the world may be a safer place for this generation’s grandchildren.

‘The mine is a stealthy killer. Long after conflict is ended, its innocent victims die or are wounded singly, in countries of which we hear little. Their lonely fate is never reported.’

The dusty scrubland was marked with red warning signs showing the skull and crossbones, with the Portuguese words ‘Perigo Minas!’ and the English translation below – danger mines.

The duke walked through an area of the site looking at the marked off areas which potentially could contain landmines.

An Angolan minister attending the event said the ‘humanistic heritage’ of the princess’s anti-landmine campaign was the catalyst for his country’s final push to remove all the munitions by 2025.

Near the south-eastern town of Dirico Harry walked into an area in the Luengue-Luiana National Park that was once an artillery base for anti-government forces who had mined the position in 2000 before retreating.

The dusty scrubland was marked with red warning signs showing the skull and crossbones, with the Portuguese words ‘Perigo Minas!’ and the English translation below – danger mines.

In 2005 a 13-year-old girl lost a foot after stepping on a mine in the area.

Jose Antonio, a regional manager for the landmine clearance charity the Halo Trust, took Harry onto the site where his staff have been working since August to make safe, and hope to complete their painstaking clearance by the end of October.

Harry watched as mine clearance worker Jorge Joao Cativa used a metal detector to search for the mostly anti-personnel mines buried in the ground.

If one is discovered staff are trained to move back and carefully remove the soil as they move forward until they reach the munition.

Angola’s landmines area a legacy of a 27-year civil war which ended in 2002 leaving behind an unknown quantity of munitions that have injured and maimed tens of thousands of people.

Mr Antonio said about Harry: ‘He was very interested in the work that my team are doing clearing the mines. He was very impressed; he knows it’s a hard and very slow and dangerous, and that you need to be very patient.’

In June the duke gave his backing to a £47 million landmine clearing initiative to help destroy thousands of munitions in a huge conservation region of Angola.

The Duke of Sussex and Halo Regional Manager Jose Antonio walk through a minefield in Dirico

The Duke of Sussex and Halo Regional Manager Jose Antonio walk through a minefield in Dirico

Britain's Prince Harry and Halo Regional Manager Jose Antonio, top right, watch as mine clearer Jorge Joao Cativa demonstrates mine clearing techniques

Britain’s Prince Harry and Halo Regional Manager Jose Antonio, top right, watch as mine clearer Jorge Joao Cativa demonstrates mine clearing techniques

The Duke of Sussex remotely detonates a landmine as part of a visit to a minefield in Dirico, Angola today

The Duke of Sussex remotely detonates a landmine as part of a visit to a minefield in Dirico, Angola today

'Landmines are an unhealed scar of war. By clearing the landmines we can help this community find peace, and with peace comes opportunity,' Harry said

‘Landmines are an unhealed scar of war. By clearing the landmines we can help this community find peace, and with peace comes opportunity,’ Harry said

Prince Harry feels ’emotional’ to walk her mother’s footsteps
Photographs of his visit echoed a famous series of images taken of his late mother Princess Diana more than 20 years ago

Photographs of his visit echoed a famous series of images taken of his late mother Princess Diana more than 20 years ago

The Duke of Sussex confidently strode through the minefield, taking off his helmet to talk to his guides

The Duke of Sussex confidently strode through the minefield, taking off his helmet to talk to his guides

Praising the work of landmine clearance charity the Halo Trust, the duke called landmines an "unhealed scar of war", adding: "By clearing the landmines we can help this community find peace, and with peace comes opportunity'

Praising the work of landmine clearance charity the Halo Trust, the duke called landmines an ‘unhealed scar of war’, adding: ‘By clearing the landmines we can help this community find peace, and with peace comes opportunity’

During his visit today, The Duke will walk along the street which was once the minefield where his mother was famously pictured. The Duke and Duchess posted this photograph to their Instagram today

During his visit today, The Duke will walk along the street which was once the minefield where his mother was famously pictured. The Duke and Duchess posted this photograph to their Instagram today

The duke walked through an area of the site looking at the marked off areas which potentially could contain landmines

The duke walked through an area of the site looking at the marked off areas which potentially could contain landmines

Prince Harry speaks at partially cleared minefield in Angola

What is the Halo Trust?

The Halo Trust was founded in 1988, by Colin Mitchell, Guy Willoughby and Susan Mitchell OBE, who had witnessed first-hand the devastation caused by landmines and other explosive remnants of war in Afghanistan.

They resolved to do something about it and founded The HALO Trust in Kabul.

The landmine issue shot to international prominence in 1997 when Princess Diana walked through one of HALO’s minefields in Angola.

Shortly after her visit, the Ottawa Mine Ban Treaty was signed, calling for all countries to unite to rid the world of landmines.

Today, the trust has programmes in 25 countries and territories across the world. It continues to clear landmines and explosives left behind by war.

It also destroys weapons, manages stockpiles and teaches families how to stay safe.

Source: Halo Trust 

The Angolan government is investing the funds in the Halo Trust, which will work over five years to rid 153 minefields of munitions in the south-eastern province of Cuando Cubango inside the Mavinga and Luengue-Luiana National Parks.

Working with other organisations the Halo Trust hopes the removal of the landmines will lead to the areas, with their wealth of habitat and wild animals, being rejuvenated and opening up to conservationists and eco-tourists.

The duke walked through an area of the site looking at the marked off areas which potentially could contain landmines.

An anti-personnel mine had been discovered earlier and Harry set it off with a controlled explosion which echoed around the area and sent up a large cloud of dust.

Lucio Goncalves Amaral, deputy minister for social integration, paid tribute to Harry’s mother and said his countrymen and women were forever in her debt.

In a speech the politician told Harry: ‘Your visit to our country is of a great human and historical significance, as it follows the visit of the late Princess Diana of Wales to Angola in January 1997.

‘We will never forget her priceless contribution to the campaign to ban the anti-personnel land mines. The Angolan people will be eternally grateful for her performance in the demining process of our territory.

‘This humanistic heritage left by the late Princess of Wales is the motivation for the Angolan executive to proceed with the demining program to free the country of mines by the year 2025.’

Angola has some of the world’s most important remaining wilderness. However, the presence of landmines & remnants of the civil war render large areas of the country unsafe for both animals and the local people who depend on deriving a sustainable livelihood from their environment.

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