Queen Elizabeth places wreath to pay respects at NYC’s ground zero after speech at UN

By AP
Tuesday, July 6, 2010

Queen places wreath at World Trade Center site

NEW YORK — Queen Elizabeth II has placed a wreath at the site of the Sept. 11 attacks in her first visit to New York City in more than 30 years.

The 84-year-old British monarch braved 100-degree heat Tuesday to pay respects at ground zero near the footprint of the World Trade Center’s south tower.

She wore a straw hat and pastel-colored long-sleeved dress and did not appear to break a sweat while greeting Sept. 11 family members and first responders.

In a 15-minute visit to the site, she put a wreath of peonies, roses, lilies and other flowers on wooden riser.

After ground zero, the queen left to visit a British garden to honor the 67 Britons killed in the 2001 attack. She addressed the United Nations earlier.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP’s earlier story is below.

UNITED NATIONS (AP) — Queen Elizabeth II challenged the United Nations on Tuesday to spearhead the international response to global dangers and promote prosperity and dignity for all the world’s inhabitants.

“In my lifetime, the United Nations has moved from being a high-minded aspiration to being a real force for common good,” the 84-year-old British monarch told diplomats from the 192 U.N. member states. “That of itself has been a signal achievement. But we are not here to reminisce. In tomorrow’s world, we must all work together as hard as ever if we are truly to be United Nations.”

Speaking as queen of 16 U.N. member states and head of the Commonwealth of 54 countries with a population of nearly 2 billion people, Elizabeth recalled the dramatic changes in the world since she last visited the United Nations in 1957, especially in science, technology and social attitudes.

But she also praised the U.N.’s aims and values which have endured — promoting peace, security and justice, fighting hunger, poverty and disease and protecting the rights and liberties of every citizen.

“For over six decades the United Nations has helped to shape the international response to global dangers,” the queen said. “The challenge now is to continue to show this clear … leadership while not losing sight of your ongoing work to secure the security, prosperity and dignity of our fellow human beings.”

Elizabeth and her husband, Prince Philip, flew to New York from Canada for a five-hour visit that will also include stops at the ground zero site where the twin World Trade Center towers were destroyed in terrorist attacks on Sept. 11, 2001. She will lay a wreath in tribute to the thousands who died, and then officially open the British Memorial Garden honoring the 67 Britons who lost their lives that day.

Dressed in a two-piece white, blue and beige print dress with a ruffled hem and a matching brimmed champagne-colored silk hat with flowers, the queen was greeted on her arrival by U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and General Assembly President Ali Abdessalam Treki and their wives.

After posing for photos in front of U.N. flags, she went to the memorial to UN peacekeepers and staff members killed in the line of duty and laid a wreath before the tattered UN flag that flew over U.N. headquarters in Baghdad on Aug. 19, 2003 when the building was bombed, killing top U.N. envoy Sergio Vieira de Mello and 21 others.

The queen then walked slowly into the two-thirds full chamber, as past diplomats gave her a standing ovation. Before her speech she sat in a beige leather chair where she spent a half-minute fishing her reading glasses out of her black handbag, resealing the clasp and laying her speech out on her lap, tasks made harder because of her white gloves.

She looked up to occasionally peer out at the crowd, where the visitor and press upper galleries were full, scanning left and right and then looking intently straight forward. Her hands lay quietly on her speech.

Treki welcomed the queen, noting that when she last spoke to the United Nations “the world was rebuilding from a devastating world war, Cold War tensions and nuclear annihilation threatened the existence of all humanity … and women were expected to stay at home.”

While the queen had witnessed “the birth of a multitude of independent nation-states based on the principles of equal rights,” he said, the world is still “blighted by extreme levels of inequality, with billions living in extreme poverty.”

Treki praised the queen for lifting the spirits and comforting victims of terrorism and natural disasters.

The secretary-general called Elizabeth “a living symbol of grace, constancy, and dignity.”

“In a changing and churning world, your are an anchor for our age,” he said. “Your reign spans the decades. From the challenges of the Cold War to the threat of global warming. From the Beatles to Beckham. From television to Twitter.”

Ban recalled that 53 years ago the queen told the General Assembly that the future would be shaped “by the strength of our devotion” to the U.N. ideals of peace, justice and prosperity.

With Elizabeth at the helm, he said, Britain and the Commonwealth “have contributed immensely to the United Nations,” noting that the four largest providers of U.N. peacekeeping troops are Commonwealth nations.

The queen recalled that when she came to the United Nations in 1957, there were just three U.N. operations oversease.

“Now, over 120,000 men and women are deployed in 26 missions across the world,” she said. “You have helped to reduce conflict, you have offered humanitarian assistance to millions of people affected by natural disasters and other emergencies, and you have been deeply committed to tackling the effects of poverty in many parts of the world.”

At the end of the short speech, she was loudly applauded. She then met separately with Treki, Ban, Security Council ambassadors and Commonwealth ambassadors.

“Everyone was very impressed,” Russia’s deputy U.N. ambassador Konstantin Dolgov told AP. “She’s a big part of the United Nations, very important.”

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