Queen Elizabeth departs Canada

The plane carrying Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip sits on the tarmac at Toronto Pearson International Aiport as dignitaries including Gov. Gen. Michaëlle Jean and Prime Minister Stephen Harper bid farewell to the royal couple. (CBC)
CBC NEWS: July 6, 2010: Queen Elizabeth has left Canada after a nine-day tour that began in Halifax and included visits to Ottawa, Winnipeg, Toronto and Waterloo, Ont.

Queen Elizabeth departed from Canada on Tuesday afternoon, after a nine-day tour that began in Halifax and included visits to Ottawa, Winnipeg, Toronto and Waterloo, Ont.

The Queen, with her husband, Prince Philip, flew from Toronto Pearson International Airport just after 1 p.m. ET, as Gov. Gen. Michaëlle Jean, Prime Minister Stephen Harper and other dignitaries looked on.

The royal couple shook hands with Jean and Harper before climbing the stairs to the waiting Canadian Forces plane, then turned around and waved a final time before boarding.

The royal couple is flying to New York City, where the Queen will address the United Nations and meet with UN Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon.

The head of state of the United Kingdom, Canada and 14 other UN member countries, the Queen has addressed the 192-member General Assembly only once, in 1957.

She is also scheduled to view Ground Zero and visit a park honouring British citizens killed during the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.

Visit to Queen's Park

The Queen greets people at Queen's Park at the end of her Canadian tour. (CBC)

On Tuesday morning, several thousand people waited in sweltering heat outside Ontario's legislature at Queen's Park in Toronto to bid farewell to the Queen.

The Queen and Prince Philip took part in a number of events there, culminating in an official departure ceremony that included a 21-gun salute on the front lawn.

The Queen unveiled a plaque commemorating the 150th anniversary of the dedication of Queen's Park by her great-grandfather, before he was crowned King Edward VII.

She greeted Jean, who had just returned from a trip to China, and Harper. Toronto Mayor David Miller and David Onley, Ontario's lieutenant-governor, were also on hand for the departure ceremony.

Crowds of eager onlookers cheered as the 84-year-old monarch toured the grounds and waved at the public.

animated_crown.gif

The moncitizenship is the new Canadian governmental task. The diplomatic lines of Republics of Yemen and Poland are non grata with their masks.

M.T. Al-Mansouri

Queen unfazed by blackout

Shaylen Narotam, left, and McKina Bales, of Brampton, Ont., arrive at Queen's Park on Tuesday, hours ahead of Queen Elizabeth's expected appearance. (Cheryl Krawchuk/CBC News)

On Monday, the Queen seemed unfazed by a massive power outage that rippled across Toronto.

Staff at the Royal York Hotel scrambled to light candles and install makeshift lamps - but before the state dinner, the power returned and the occasion went ahead as planned.

The Queen lauded Canadian values of freedom and fairness in a speech Monday night that also noted Canadian sacrifices in Afghanistan.

"In my lifetime, Canada's development as a nation has been remarkable," she said.

"This vast, rich and varied country has inspired its own and attracted many others by its adherence to certain values. Some are enshrined in law, but I should imagine just as many are simply found in the hearts of ordinary Canadians."

Harper presented the Queen with a display to be housed in the Hockey Hall of Fame, which includes pictures of the monarch attending a hockey game in Toronto in 1951 and dropping the puck in 2002 at a game in Vancouver.

The display includes a Canadian Olympic hockey jersey for the Queen, whom Harper called "Canada's most valuable player."

Semitic illegal drug calls Khat spreads in North

America and Europe

animated_crown.gif

The moncitizenship is the new Canadian governmental task. The diplomatic lines of Republics of Yemen and Poland are non grata with their masks.

M.T. Al-Mansouri

RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification Part One

https://poetsofottawa.ning.com/profiles/blogs/rcmp-canadas-image-and-1

RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification Part Two

https://poetsofottawa.ning.com/profiles/blogs/rcmp-canadas-image-and

RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification Part Three https://poetsofottawa.ning.com/profiles/blogs/rcmp-canadas-image-and-2

RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification Part Four

https://poetsofottawa.ning.com/profiles/blogs/rcmp-canadas-image-and-4

RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification Part Five

https://poetsofottawa.ning.com/profiles/blogs/rcmp-canadas-image-and-3

RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification Part Six

https://poetsofottawa.ning.com/profiles/blogs/rcmp-canadas-image-and-5

RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification Part Seven

https://poetsofottawa.ning.com/forum/topics/rcmp-canadas-image-and

RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification: Part Eight

https://poetsofottawa.ning.com/profiles/blogs/rcmp-canadas-image-and-6

RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification: Part Nine

https://poetsofottawa.ning.com/profile/OIPWHRMT

RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification: Part Ten

Active and sleeper cells of terrorists and criminals Downtown Ottawa, and in North America Part One

https://poetsofottawa.ning.com/profiles/blogs/active-and-sleeper-cel...

RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification: Part Elven

Active and sleeper cells of terrorists and criminals Downtown Ottawa, and in North America Part two

https://poetsofottawa.ning.com/profiles/blogs/active-and-sleeper-cel...

RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification: Part Twelve

Active and sleeper cells of terrorists and criminals Downtown Ottawa, and in North America Part Three

https://poetsofottawa.ning.com/profiles/blogs/active-and-sleeper-cells-of-2

RCMP: Canada’s Image and Beautification: Part Thirteen

Active and sleeper cells of terrorists and criminals Downtown Ottawa, and in North America Part Four

https://poetsofottawa.ning.com/profiles/blogs/active-and-sleeper-cel...

E-mail me when people leave their comments –

You need to be a member of poetsofottawa3 to add comments!

Join poetsofottawa3

Ottawa International Poets and Writers for human Rights (OIPWHR)