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Racist remarks; Son of Queen's former Sri Lankan aide-de-camp comes to defence

13 Mar 2021

The son of Major General Anton Muttukumaru, who was a former aide-de-camp of Queen Elizabeth II, has come to the defence of the Queen at a time when the members of the royal family have been accused of being racist, the Guardian said. With the royal family caught in a race storm in the wake of the Oprah Winfrey interview with Duke and Duchess of Sussex, Muttukumaru’s son Christopher had spoken to the Guardian about his father’s experiences. Born in Sri Lanka, Muttukumaru was the Queen’s aide-de-camp in 1954. Christopher described the friendship his father had with the Queen which endured for years beyond his time in service. “Years later, whenever my father came to the UK to visit my family and me – long after he had any official position in the army or diplomatic service – the Queen would give him a private audience in Buckingham Palace,” said Christopher, a former general counsel to the Department for Transport. “There was no need for her to do that – my father was just an ordinary member of the public by this time – but she made time in her diary for him from the 70s onwards.” The first Sri Lanka-born soldier to command Sri Lanka’s army, Muttukumaru read PPE at Jesus College, Oxford, in 1928 and became a lawyer at Gray’s Inn before returning home in 1934. Muttukumaru joined the Ceylon Defence Force and at the outbreak of the second world war he was in charge of the South East Asia Command headquarters in Kandy. After the war, Muttukumaru came to London to lead his soldiers in the victory parade. He returned six years later with his men for the funeral of George VI in 1952, and a third time a year later for the Queen’s coronation. Hearing of his plan to attend her coronation, the soon-to-be Queen issued a personal invitation – couched as a command – to attend the service in Westminster Abbey. Muttukumaru, however, decided to march with his soldiers instead. According to his 2001 obituary in the Telegraph, the Queen forgave his refusal and, after later seeing his men mounting guard at Buckingham Palace along with her own guardsmen, congratulated him on the smartness of his men. “Regarding the controversy over a member of the royal family asking (if true) about the colour of the Duke and Duchess of Sussex’s son, my point is that if she was somebody who harboured views about coloured or black people, it certainly didn’t come through in her treatment of my father,” Christopher said. Muttukumaru went on to become his country’s high commissioner to Australia, New Zealand and Pakistan. In 1966 he became ambassador to Egypt. Four years previously he had hosted lunch for the Queen Mother in Canberra with his wife, Peggy, and the then Australian prime minister, Harold Holt. Muttukumaru, who died in 2000 aged 92, always spoke with great affection of the Queen’s treatment of him, said his son.


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