In Hong Kong, hundreds kept up with Queen Elizabeth’s funeral on their phones as they queued for hours to pay their tributes. In Sydney, Australia, customers packed into pubs to watch the ceremony on screens.
And in Paris, France, bar owner Thibaud Dupont showed off the new tattoo of the monarch on his forearm.
“She was not our queen, but she reigned over Britain for 70 years. The only other one that reigned longer was Louis XIV. And so that’s a common history,” he told Reuters.
Across the globe, crowds gathered outside British embassies and consulates and at cafes, bars and other public places to bear witness to the pageantry unfurling thousands of miles away from their homes.
“Her presence is literally everywhere,” IT professional Victor Lai, 30, said outside the British Consulate General in Hong Kong, where people have queued for the past 10 days to sign a memorial book.
“You’ve got the hospitals, the schools, and even the road names which are still under her name.”
Nearby, visitors had piled up flowers, hand-written notes, photographs, candles and other mementos in the centre of a city still marked by its 156-years of British colonial rule.
The event had more than a historical resonance.
The queen served as Hong Kong’s head of state for 45 years, presiding over a period of fast development which some consider to be a golden age.
Since the territory was returned to Chinese rule in 1997, Britain’s government, if not its monarch, has continued to play a role, sometimes angering Beijing by criticising its rule.
Elsewhere, people turned up and switched on to wonder at the foreign ceremony. Others had more personal, national and constitutional ties to the late monarch, her family and the whole institution.
In Bahrain, British expatriates paid tribute to Elizabeth at a service at St. Christopher’s Cathedral in the capital Manama.
At the Lord Dudley Hotel in Sydney’s eastern suburbs, Nina Whitfeld looked on with other customers.
“This is a moment in history. She’s a steadfast for the monarchy and she’s the glue that kept them together and she’ll be missed. She meant a lot to me,” Whitfeld told Reuters.
In the Costa del Sol town of Mijas in southern Spain, Britons watched the funeral procession at a cafe and in a nearby bar.
“We have a big expat community in this area of Andalusia, and we are very proud today that a lot of people turned out to come and show their respects to our queen,” said 59-year-old bar worker Mark Driver.
“It´s a sad day today but we are also here to celebrate our queen´s 70-year reign.”
(Reuters)