When the king visited the National Centre of Indigenous Excellence (NCIE) in Sydney, he met elders, one of whom informed him that “sovereignty” was their aim.
While attempting to deliver a notice for the King’s arrest to the sovereign, Mr. Wharton yelled at the audience, accusing Charles of being a “king of thieves and a king of liars.”
When police carried him away, several of the several hundred people who had gathered to watch the royals rejoiced, according to the article.
In Australia, where the urban Aboriginal civil rights movement began, Charles was greeted by an Indigenous elder after a smoking ceremony.
In stark contrast to the heckling of the day before, the monarch received a warm greeting from elder Michael Welsh when he visited with elders at the National Centre of Indigenous Excellence (NCIE) in inner-city Redfern.
Senator Lidia Thorpe shouted, “You are not our King,” after he addressed the Australian Senate on Monday.