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Bare-breasted protest for Charles

2005-03-08 08:40
line
<b>A bare-breasted protestor with the words "get your colonial shame off my breasts" written on her is taken away by police during British Prince Charles' walkabout in Civic Square in New Zealand. (Ross Setford, AP)</b>

A bare-breasted protestor with the words "get your colonial shame off my breasts" written on her is taken away by police during British Prince Charles' walkabout in Civic Square in New Zealand. (Ross Setford, AP)

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Wellington, New Zealand - A woman bared her chest and shouted "shame, shame" as Britain's Prince Charles arrived at an official function in the New Zealand capital, Wellington, on Tuesday.

The blonde-haired woman, exposed from the waist up, was grabbed by two uniformed police officers, arrested and marched from the scene as the prince was led into a building about 20m away.

In an apparent protest against the monarchy, the woman had the message "Get your colonial shame off my breasts" written across her chest and stomach.

Reporters said the prince appeared to look in the woman's direction and smile as he entered Wellington's City Art Gallery.

Earlier, another bare-chested woman carrying a small child was hauled away by plain-clothed police moments before the prince would have been confronted by her as he greeted a line of well-wishers.

The woman, also bare from the waist up, was dragged away shouting, "I just want to feed my baby."

Charles didn't notice her

Charles did not appear to notice the woman, local media said.

In another apparently linked protest, five anti-monarchists stood atop a wall with banners reading "Death to the monarchy" and "Honour the treaty," a reference to British crown breaches of New Zealand's founding treaty with the indigenous Maori people.

A woman with a bullhorn chanted, "Shame on the British monarchy, shame for years of colonialism, shame for years of genocide."

The protesters also shouted "parasites, parasites" as Charles walked through the city's Civic Square greeting some of the more than 600 people gathered to see him.

The protests caused little disruption as well-wishers bearing British and New Zealand flags talked with the prince and a group of schoolchildren played hopscotch as part of a welcome display for the heir to Britain's throne.

Charles later visited the City Art Gallery, where he addressed urban designers and local officials on city planning, which is a particular interest of the prince.

The prince was on the third day of a five-day royal tour of New Zealand. He flies to Fiji late on Thursday before returning to Britain.

- AP

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