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Charles and Camilla use electric tuk-tuk at end of Kenyan tour

Charles and Camilla arrived by tuk-tuk at Fort Jesus in Mombasa (Ian Vogler/Daily Mirror/PA)
Charles and Camilla arrived by tuk-tuk at Fort Jesus in Mombasa (Ian Vogler/Daily Mirror/PA) Charles and Camilla arrived by tuk-tuk at Fort Jesus in Mombasa (Ian Vogler/Daily Mirror/PA)

The King and Queen said goodbye to Kenya in local style – posing in a tuk-tuk used by commuters on the streets of Mombasa.

Charles and Camilla ended their first tour of a Commonwealth country since the King’s accession with a flurry of royal engagements in torrential rain, and outside the Kenyan city’s historic Fort Jesus they sat in the three-wheel vehicle.

In keeping with Charles’s belief in sustainability, the tuk-tuk was electric, and with the ministerial jet a few miles away the King quipped to the press flying on his plane: “Maybe we can use this to get to the airport.”

Charles and Camilla
Charles and Camilla Dancers performed for Charles and Camilla at Fort Jesus (Victoria Jones/PA)

The royal couple were hampered by heavy downpours that turned streets into rivers and saw the King’s schedule rearranged, with a visit to a mosque brought forward before Friday prayers.

Earlier, the King told religious leaders working to promote peace on the Kenyan coastline how everyone is trying to find a path to the “divine”.

Charles sat down with the Coast Interfaith Council of Clerics (CICC) meeting at Mombasa Memorial Cathedral to hear how they have joined forces to tackle a range of issues in their communities in the Mombasa area.

King Charles
King Charles Charles’s visit to Fort Jesus coincided with heavy downpours (Ian Vogler/Daily Mirror/PA)

For more than two decades, the CICC, whose members represent Christianity, Hindu, Muslim and African traditional faiths, has been working in the areas of peace-building, child protection, preventing and countering violent extremism, and public participation and governance.

After a female evangelical minister described how clerics from other faiths attended her ordination and blessed her, the King said: “We’re all trying to find the same path to the divine – sometimes by different routes.”