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Harry retraces Diana’s footsteps through mine field


Prince Harry has followed in his mother’s footsteps by wearing a flak jacket and walking down a path in an active land mine field in Angola to raise awareness for a charity’s work clearing explosives from old war zones.

The Duke of Sussex is in the southern African country with the Halo Trust organisation, the same group Princess Diana worked with when she went to Angola in January 1997, seven months before she was killed in a car crash in Paris.

Diana’s advocacy and the images of her walking through a minefield helped mobilise support for a land mine ban treaty that was ratified later that year.

Harry walked through a land mine field near a village in Cuito Cuanavale in southern Angola on Wednesday, according to Halo Trust. It’s not the first time he has retraced his mother’s steps after travelling to Angola for a similar awareness campaign in 2019.

The land mines across Angola were left behind from its 27-year civil war from 1975 to 2002.

The Halo Trust says at least 60,000 people have been killed or injured by land mines since 2008.

It says it has located and destroyed over 120,000 land mines and 100,000 other explosive devices in Angola since it started work in the country in 1994, but 1000 minefields still need to be cleared.


Prince Harry has followed in his mother’s footsteps by wearing a flak jacket and walking down a path in an active land mine field in Angola to raise awareness for a charity’s work clearing explosives from old war zones.

The Duke of Sussex is in the southern African country with the Halo Trust organisation, the same group Princess Diana worked with when she went to Angola in January 1997, seven months before she was killed in a car crash in Paris.

Diana’s advocacy and the images of her walking through a minefield helped mobilise support for a land mine ban treaty that was ratified later that year.

Harry walked through a land mine field near a village in Cuito Cuanavale in southern Angola on Wednesday, according to Halo Trust. It’s not the first time he has retraced his mother’s steps after travelling to Angola for a similar awareness campaign in 2019.

The land mines across Angola were left behind from its 27-year civil war from 1975 to 2002.

The Halo Trust says at least 60,000 people have been killed or injured by land mines since 2008.

It says it has located and destroyed over 120,000 land mines and 100,000 other explosive devices in Angola since it started work in the country in 1994, but 1000 minefields still need to be cleared.

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