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Kate will join family at Cenotaph for Remembrance Sunday in second major Royal event in her radiant return to duties

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THE Princess of Wales is set to join her husband and the King to commemorate the war dead on Remembrance Sunday.

Today will be the first time Kate, 42, has carried out official Royal engagements on consecutive days since last December.

Princess Kate beams at a Remembrance event last night
Reuters
LNP
Veterans and servicemen gather in Trafalgar Square[/caption]
LNP
A service is held at The Cenotaph on Whitehall in Westminster on Remembrance Sunday[/caption]
LNP
Thousands of people honour the war dead by gathering at the iconic memorial to lay wreaths[/caption]

Kate, who continues to recover following her treatment for cancer, made a radiant return to duties at the Royal British Legion Festival of Remembrance on Saturday evening.

She will attend the Remembrance Sunday service at the Cenotaph in Whitehall today where the Prince of Wales and King Charles will lay wreaths.

William revealed Kate aims to step up her royal engagements in 2025.

He said: “I think hopefully Catherine will be doing a bit more next year, so, we’ll have some more trips maybe lined up.”

Last night William affectionately put his arm around his wife as they emerged from their car outside the Royal Albert Hall.

The couple smiled and chatted warmly while taking their seats for the concert.

Kate, in a black dress and coat, wore Princess Diana’s pearl drop earrings with diamond carrier, plus a matching necklace.

She was seen in the earrings at the Cenotaph ceremony in 2022.

Diana had been gifted them by jewellers Collingwood for her 1981 wedding to Charles.

Leading the royals at last night’s event, the King — who is also being treated for cancer — was in good spirits as he chatted to Armed Forces veterans.

The Queen, 77, was absent as she battles a chest infection.

Earlier yesterday Buckingham Palace confirmed Camilla was staying at home to rest but there was no cause for concern.

The Palace said: “Following doctors’ guidance to ensure a full recovery from a seasonal chest infection, and to protect others from any potential risk, Her Majesty will not attend this weekend’s Remembrance events.”

In January Kate spent 13 nights at The London Clinic for abdominal surgery.

William following his mother's lead

By Arthur Edwards

I AM delighted that Kate seems ready to go back on the road again.

Her appearance at the Cenotaph today is a sign that we will hopefully be seeing more of her next year.

She is always a delight to work with. Her husband, William, has also now outlined his future. He is very much a modern-day man.

I think he is following the lead of his mother, Princess Diana, who broke the mould for how the royals did things.

I remember she held the hand of a leper in Nigeria and shook hands with HIV patients in hospital when everybody was nervous about the ‘plague’ sweeping the world at the time.

William watched Diana modernise the royals and he is continuing her work.

Subsequent tests found cancer and she began preventative chemotherapy treatment in late February.

In September she told the world in a family video that she had finished chemo.

Last week William visited South Africa — his first foreign trip since Kate’s diagnosis.

Lifting the lid on his dad and wife’s cancer battles he has described the year as “brutal” and “dreadful”.

He and mum-of-three Kate cancelled a trip to Italy and to see British troops in the Baltic.

Kate had aimed to time her return for the Remembrance services, plus her Christmas carol concert at Westminster Abbey.

Charles will lead the nation on Sunday in a two-minute silence to honour those who have died in conflict.

The Royal British Legion’s veteran parade will see 10,000 veterans, representing 326 different armed forces and civilian organisations, march past the Cenotaph.

This year marks the 80th anniversary of the D-Day landings in the Second World War and the 25th anniversary of the end of the war in Kosovo.

It also marks the 75th anniversary of NATO and the 120th anniversary of the Entente Cordiale between the UK and France.

More than 800 sailors, soldiers and aviators will be on duty on Remembrance Sunday.

Kate will watch, as is tradition, from above on the nearby Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office balcony overlooking Whitehall.

BNPS
Remembrance weekend service at the Nothe Fort in Weymouth[/caption]
Story Picture Agency
Preparations ahead of the annual Royal British Legion Remembrance Parade[/caption]
Reuters
The Royal Family at the Festival of Remembrance[/caption]
Andrew Parsons / Kensington Palace
Kate’s radiant return at the Royal Albert Hall came as Wills said she is well enough for more royal engagements[/caption]