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Moment King Charles rushes to comfort teen after medical emergency | Royal | News

King Charles and Queen Camilla encountered violent downerses while marking the centenary of a war monument that commemorated the war of the Scottish town. Meanwhile, a young student who gently fainted and needed medical intervention relieved.

The king and the queen were welcomed by hundreds of spectators, despite the rain spilled today, to mark the hundred of the Kirkcaldy War Monument in Fife. During the service, the 13 -year -old local student Robbie McGOVERN collapsed and needed medical assistance.

Fortunately, the young man returned to health and was also lucky enough to meet the king just before he left.

King shook his hand and asked: “Did you hit your head?” Robbie replied, “No,” but he said, “A little” and asked if there was any “buzzing” between his ears. “Don’t worry, I remember.”

Charles’s first mission was to reveal a Cairn, which was commissioned to celebrate the 100th anniversary of Kirkcaldy War Monument Gardens and designed as a time capsule for future generations.

He chatted with the students who helped to fill with school memories and memory sticks full of photographs of the Local ViewForth High School and spoke about Yağmur: “I tell myself that this is a blessing.”

Camilla said: “A little moist,” he added: “We got used to Heatwave.”

After a short wreath flooring service, Camilla left to visit Maggie’s Fife while visiting the nearby Kirkcaldy Art Gallery.

Former Prime Minister Gordon Brown later joined the King in a solo event, his wife Sarah Brown met the queen when both women visited a cancer center operated by Maggie, a officially supported organization.

Mr. Brown later said: “Today, the biggest problem in England is the sections caused by child poverty, and as much as we can, we do something about it.

“We have seen that the excess of goods for companies has not been re -placed in a circular economy, and at the same time we thought that we could solve some of the problems of pollution and poverty.

“We currently have 90 companies and we work with 1,000 organizations in FIFE. So we work with all schools, social workers, health visitors, food banks and charities – a total of one or two, eight million goods worth £ 80 million in the last year.”

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