Huambo: Britain’s Prince Harry on Friday walked through a cleared minefield in Angola, tracing his late mother’s footsteps to draw attention to a country that remains plagued by land mines.
Donning a protective visor and blue bullet-proof vest, Harry was almost the exact replica of Princess Diana when she famously walked across a cleared minefield near the central city of Huambo in 1997.
Diana was drawing attention to the more than one million landmines planted during Angola’s 27-year civil war, which ended in 2002. Just months later she was killed in a car crash in Paris, when Harry was 12. “Landmines are an unhealed scar of war,” Harry said in remote national park near the southern town of Dirico, where he detonated a mine from a distance.
“By clearing the landmine we can help this community find peace — and with peace comes opportunity.” Harry also called on Angolans to protect the “unique wildlife” in the area, which lies 1,000 kilometres (600 miles) from Huambo, near the border with Botswana.
“That river and those wildlife are your natural assets and if looked after will bring you unlimited opportunities within the conservancy-led economy.”
The Duke of Susses will travel to Huambo later on Friday to view the iconic site where Diana was photographed and visit a recently-renovated orthopaedic hospital.
More than 1,600 people have been injured by landmines in Angola between the start of the war in 1975 and 2015, according to British charity Halo Trust. (AFP)