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Ghanaians living in the UK who obviously have enough time on their hands held a funeral for the departed Queen Elizabeth on the street of Cornell in Tottenham.
The funeral moderator, as it seemed was heard dancing to tuneful highlife rhythms while clad in red and asing everyone around adjourning cities to come and join them mourn the powerful monarch.
It’s evident the solemn event was held simultanelously with the main funeral that took place at Buckingham Palace.
The video was shared by blogger Blogger thosecalledcelebs and instantly it was met with wild reactions from netizens, most of whom blasted them for their clout-chasing antics.
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“Ghanaian Community in the UK having their own fun£ral at the #buckinghampalace android 😆❤️ lo₩ budget inlaws in the building…. at least! Koo Charles should have allowed them to come and carry the fun£ral kenkey eerrr .. ohh 😠😆,” she wrote.
Meanwhile, a formal funeral and military parade were held as part of the nation’s final farewell to Queen Elizabeth II. King Charles III and the Royal Family were joined by world leaders and foreign aristocracy in the Westminster Abbey congregation.
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As the casket was transported to Windsor, where she was laid to rest, hundreds of thousands of people lined the streets.
The Dean of Westminster praised the Queen’s “lifelong sense of responsibility” during the funeral. She was praised for her “unwavering dedication to a noble calling for so many years as Queen and Head of the Commonwealth,” according to the Very Rev. David Hoyle.
BBC reporys that about 100 presidents and heads of government joined the 2,000-strong congregation at the abbey – as well as US President Joe Biden and his wife, Jill, there were French President Emmanuel Macron, New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern, Canadian PM Justin Trudeau, South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol and Chinese Vice-President Wang Qishan.
Europe’s royal families were strongly represented – with kings and queens from Denmark, Spain, Sweden, Norway, Belgium and The Netherlands. Denmark’s Queen Margrethe II – now Europe’s longest-reigning monarch – sat opposite King Charles close to the coffin.
SOURCE: www.Ghbase.com
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