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Tuesday, July 23, 2013

OHHH It's a BOY!::TAZAMA PICHA JINSI WANAVYOSHEREHEKEA BAADA YA MTOTO WA KIUME WA PRINCE WILLIAM KUZALIWA AMBAYE NDIO ATAKUWA MFALME AJAYE


The big day has arrived: An easel stands in the Forecourt of Buckingham Palace in London to announce the birth of a baby boy, at 4.24pm to the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge at St Mary's Hospital
The big day has arrived: An easel stands in the Forecourt of Buckingham Palace in London to announce the birth of a baby boy, at 4.24pm to the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge at St Mary's Hospital
It's a boy: The message displayed outside the palace telling the world that there is a new prince in the British royal family
It's a boy: The message displayed outside the palace telling the world that there is a new prince in the British royal family


The Queen's Press Secretary Ailsa Anderson with Badar Azim, a footman, place the official document
The Queen's Press Secretary Ailsa Anderson with Badar Azim, a footman, place the official document
Celebration time! Thousands of well wishers mob the gates of Buckingham Palace as the news of the Duchess of Cambridge's baby was revealed tonight
Celebration time! Thousands of well wishers mob the gates of Buckingham Palace as the news of the Duchess of Cambridge's baby was revealed tonight
The waiting crowds cheer as the Queen's Press Secretary Ailsa Anderson with Badar Azim a footman place on an easel in the Forecourt of Buckingham Palace a notification, to announce the birth of a baby boy
The waiting crowds cheer as the Queen's Press Secretary Ailsa Anderson with Badar Azim a footman place on an easel in the Forecourt of Buckingham Palace a notification, to announce the birth of a baby boy

Britain rejoices: Monarchists clamour for a better view as the news is revealed outside the Queen's home
Britain rejoices: Monarchists clamour for a better view as the news is revealed outside the Queen's home
A police officer tries to control a crowd of people trying to get to the railing to take pictures of the notice proclaiming the birth of the Royal baby
A police officer tries to control a crowd of people trying to get to the railing to take pictures of the notice proclaiming the birth of the Royal baby
Happy: One girl shouts with joy as she hears that the couple have had a baby boy
Happy: One girl shouts with joy as she hears that the couple have had a baby boy
Fascinated: Two children in the crowd climb on adults' shoulders to grab a better view of the palace
Fascinated: Two children in the crowd climb on adults' shoulders to grab a better view of the palace


News of the royal birth - which came after an 11 hour labour - was not made public by Kensington Palace until 8.29pm last night, four hours after the baby was born.
Sources said the couple ‘just wanted to spend a little time together to bond as a family’ and inform members of both families privately before the news was disseminated to the world. William made those calls personally.
The Queen, who arrived back at Buckingham Palace just after 3pm yesterday, declared herself ‘delighted’ - as did all.
Kate, 31, will remain in hospital overnight with her baby - her husband is also, unusually, expected to stay with her - but may be discharged as early as tomorrow after being assessed by doctors first thing.
Surprisingly, no family visitors were expected last night - not even the Middleton family - as the couple want to spend some time alone together, sources told the Mail.
Ram: People straining to look at a notice formally announcing the birth of a son to Britain's Prince William and Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge
Ram: People straining to look at a notice formally announcing the birth of a son to Britain's Prince William and Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge


Iconic: Crowds climb the Victoria memorial to try and get a better view
Iconic: Crowds climb the Victoria memorial to try and get a better view
Photographers: Members of the public are desperate to capture a piece of the special moment
Photographers: Members of the public are desperate to capture a piece of the special moment

Resplendent:The baby boy was born at 4.24pm and weighed in at 8lbs 6oz
Resplendent:The baby boy was born at 4.24pm and weighed in at 8lbs 6oz
In its official statement Kensington Palace said : ‘Her Royal Highness The Duchess of Cambridge was safely delivered of a son at 4.24pm.
‘The baby weighs 8lbs 6oz.
‘The Duke of Cambridge was present for the birth.
‘The Queen, The Duke of Edinburgh, The Prince of Wales, The Duchess of Cornwall, Prince Harry and members of both families have been informed and are delighted with the news.
‘Her Royal Highness and her child are both doing well and will remain in hospital overnight.
Royal aide Ed Perkins leaves St Mary's with the official announcement that the Cambridges' son has been born
Royal aide Ed Perkins leaves St Mary's with the official announcement that the Cambridges' son has been born
Ed Perkins carries envelope containing details of the Royal baby
He hands over the announcement to a waiting chauffeur to be ferried across central London to Buckingham Palace to be displayed
Mr Perkins rushes down the steps of the hospital to the street where, right, he hands it to a chauffeur to be ferried across central London to the Palace
A Jaguar car is driven into the Forecourt of Buckingham Palace bringing the news to announce the birth
A Jaguar car is driven into the Forecourt of Buckingham Palace bringing the news to announce the birth
After the message's delivery, the Queen's senior Page Philip Rhodes, right, is given the official notification in the forecourt of Buckingham Palace
After the message's delivery, the Queen's senior Page Philip Rhodes, right, is given the official notification in the forecourt of Buckingham Palace
A day for celebrations: Royal fans mob the gates of the Palace, trying to get the best photographs as the announcement is put in place
A day for celebrations: Royal fans mob the gates of the Palace, trying to get the best photographs as the announcement is put in place

Last night Charles, who cleverly pretended he had no news of the baby when questioned by well-wishers in Yorkshire yesterday afternoon, said he was ‘thrilled’ and eagerly looking forward to seeing his first grand-child.
‘Both my wife and I are overjoyed at the arrival of my first grandchild. It is an incredibly special moment for William and Catherine and we are so thrilled for them on the birth of their baby boy,’ he said.
The clearly overwhelmed prince added: ‘Grandparenthood is a unique moment in anyone’s life, as countless kind people have told me in recent months, so I am enormously proud and happy to be a grandfather for the first time and we are eagerly looking forward to seeing the baby in the near future.’
Blue for a boy: The crew of HMS Lancaster celebrate the birth of the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge's son on patrol in the Caribbean
Blue for a boy: The crew of HMS Lancaster celebrate the birth of the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge's son on patrol in the Caribbean
Tribute: Sailors on the HMS Kent spelled out the word BOY on the ship's flight deck to send their best wishes and congratulations to the royal couple
Tribute: Sailors on the HMS Kent spelled out the word BOY on the ship's flight deck to send their best wishes and congratulations to the royal couple
It's a boy: The news beamed in lights from the BT Tower
It's a boy: The news beamed in lights from the BT Tower
In lights: The news was broadcast in a special animation which shone from the BT Tower in Fitzrovia, central London
Well-wishers wearing outfits emblazoned with the national flag celebrate news of the birth of the new Royal baby outside the Lindo Wing at St Mary's Hospital in Paddington
Well-wishers wearing outfits emblazoned with the national flag celebrate news of the birth of the new Royal baby outside the Lindo Wing at St Mary's Hospital in Paddington
A town crier announces the birth of the son of The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge outside the Lindo Wing at St Mary's Hospital
David Cameron outside Number 10 tonight congratulating the Royal couple on the birth of their son
A town crier announces the birth of the son of The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge outside the Lindo Wing at St Mary's Hospital. Right, David Cameron outside Number 10 tonight congratulating the Royal couple on the birth of their son. 'The whole country will celebrate,' he said.
Royal frenzy: Self-proclaimed Town Crier Tony Appleton rings his bell in celebration outside St Mary's
Royal frenzy: Self-proclaimed Town Crier Tony Appleton rings his bell in celebration outside St Mary's

 

Dancing in the streets: Revellers in fancy dress party outside St Mary's, where the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge will stay together overnight before going home tomorrow
Dancing in the streets: Revellers in fancy dress party outside St Mary's, where the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge will stay together overnight before going home tomorrow
Good job: Guy Thorpe-Beeston, Marcus Setchel and Alan Farthing, the medical team in charge of the birth of the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge's newborn baby, leave the Lindo Wing
Good job: Guy Thorpe-Beeston, Marcus Setchell and Alan Farthing, the medical team in charge of the birth of the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge's newborn baby, leave the Lindo Wing
It wasn't this big... Dr Setchel gestures to the crowd as the medical team make their way home for the night
It wasn't this big... Dr Setchell gestures to the crowd as the medical team make their way home for the night

Capturing the moment forever: People take pictures outside St. Mary's hospital. The new royal baby will be the 43rd sovereign since William the Conqueror if it follows reigns by the Charles then William
Capturing the moment forever: People take pictures outside St. Mary's hospital. The new royal baby will be the 43rd sovereign since William the Conqueror if it follows reigns by the Charles then William
Royal Detective turns up with two pizzas from Zizzi's restaurant at 8.45pm after leaving 10 mins before the announcement of the royal birth
Royal Detective turns up with two pizzas from Zizzi's restaurant at 8.45pm after leaving 10 mins before the announcement of the royal birth
Another important delivery: A Royal detective turns up at the rear entrance to St Mary's with two pizzas from Zizzi's restaurant at 8.45pm, after leaving 10 mins before the announcement of the Royal birth
Shortly after an announcement was made by press release last night, the couple’s Press Secretary, Ed Perkins, walked out of the hospital to hand the formal proclamation to a waiting driver who sped with it across London to Buckingham Palace.
There it was displayed on an easel last used to announce William’s birth in 1982 by the Queen’s Press Secretary, Aisla Anderson.
For much of the day, however, the waiting media and public had little more to go on than a brief 45-word statement from Kensington Palace which read: ‘Her Royal Highness The Duchess of Cambridge has been admitted this morning to St. Mary’s Hospital, Paddington, London in the early stages of labour.
‘The Duchess travelled by car from Kensington Palace to the Lindo Wing at St Mary’s Hospital with The Duke of Cambridge.’
Palace officials refused to give any further details, arguing they wanted to afford the Duchess some ‘dignity’ in what was a very public labour, although sources also confirmed what the nation had long suspected: that Kate was overdue.
But photographs taken at 5.30am by a freelance photographer waiting outside the hospital capture the moment just seconds after Kate and her husband, both 31, were smuggled in a side entrance to the hospital.
Blue for a boy: The fountains at Trafalgar Square are seen lit blue to signify the birth of a baby boy, part of a plan previously announced by Westminster council. If it was a girl the fountains would have shone pink
Blue for a boy: The fountains at Trafalgar Square are seen lit blue to signify the birth of a baby boy, part of a plan previously announced by Westminster council. If it was a girl the fountains would have shone pink

A woman swims in the fountains at Trafalgar Square: The Prime Minister said the 'whole country will celebrate' the birth of the royal baby as news of the child's arrival spread across the globe
A woman swims in the fountains at Trafalgar Square: The Prime Minister said the 'whole country will celebrate' the birth of the royal baby as news of the child's arrival spread across the globe
Get 'em started young: The Royal baby has already been sent a present from Prince Williams favourite football team - an Aston Villa FC shirt with HRH 1 printed on the back
Get 'em started young: The Royal baby has already been sent a present from Prince Williams favourite football team - an Aston Villa FC shirt with HRH 1 printed on the back. Prince William is a big fan of the Premier League team from Birmingham and the club have announced they are excited to have another Villa fan in their ranks. An announcement read: 'Congratulations to the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge. Another Villa fan arrives into the world! #AVFC #RoyalBabyBoy'

Sky's Kay Burley announces that the Royal baby is a boy

 
Vast: Crowds of tourists and well-wishers gather on the steps of the Queen Victoria Memorial Statue and at the gates outside Buckingham Palace today
Vast: Crowds of tourists and well-wishers gather on the steps of the Queen Victoria Memorial Statue and at the gates outside Buckingham Palace today as they wait for the royal baby to be born
Preparations: Crowds have flocked to the areas outside Buckingham Palace, where the baby's birth will be announced in the coming hours
Preparations: Crowds have flocked to the areas outside Buckingham Palace, where the baby's birth will be announced in the coming hours
Excited: Huge numbers of people are gathering outside Buckingham Palace, which has had a red rope erected to control crowds
Excited: Huge numbers of people are gathering outside Buckingham Palace, which has had a red rope erected to control crowds

Anticipation: For weeks people have been sleeping outside the Lindo Wing, where the baby is born, and now many will also wait outside the Queen's home
Anticipation: For weeks people have been sleeping outside the Lindo Wing, where the baby is born, and now many will also wait outside the Queen's home
Royal excitement: Enthusiasts gather outside Buckingham Palace today and some tourists cool off in the fountains on what has been the hottest day of the year
Royal excitement: Enthusiasts gather outside Buckingham Palace today and some tourists cool off in the fountains on what has been the hottest day of the year

Royal baby coming: Members of the public cool off in the pools outside Buckingham Palace today as the country waits for news about the royal birth
Royal baby coming: Members of the public cool off in the pools outside Buckingham Palace today as the country waits for news about the royal birth

Fever pitch: There were huge cheers and a rushing crowd as the Queen arrived back at Buckingham Palace with her corgis this afternoon ahead of the birth of the royal baby
Fever pitch: There were huge cheers and a rushing crowd as the Queen arrived back at Buckingham Palace with one of her dorgis this afternoon ahead of the birth of the royal baby. The breed is a cross between a dachshund and a corgi
The royal parents-to-be were driven from Kensington Palace in a blacked out Ford Galaxy people carrier followed by a blue Saab containing a security detail, both different vehicles from normal in a bid to outfox the paparazzi.
The only clue as to the passengers’ identities were the plain-clothed Scotland Yard protection officers standing in the street.
Final public appearance: The Duchess of Cambridge arrives at Buckingham Palace during a horse drawn parade last month as she is seen for the last time before she was due to give birth
Final public appearance: The Duchess of Cambridge arrives at Buckingham Palace during a horse drawn parade last month as she is seen for the last time before she was due to give birth
News of their arrival was quick to leak out over the social media network Twitter, with photographers crowing about their ‘world exclusive’ by 5.55am.
Aides had always made clear, however, that they would not publicly comment on the Duchess’s condition until she had been safely assessed by her consultants, the Queen’s Surgeon-Gynaecologist Marcus Setchell and his assistant, Surgeon-Gynaecologist to the Royal Household, Alan Farthing.
At 7.29am that announcement was finally released.
Although it is unconfirmed by the palace, medical experts suggest that the Duchess, who has made clear she hopes for a natural birth, was not medically induced even though she was believed to be up to a week overdue.
Doctors would not have been keen to instigate a medical intervention until she was closer to two weeks’ pregnant and it would almost certainly been done under supervision in hospital, whereas the couple were driven from their home, Nottingham Cottage in the grounds of Kensington Palace, where they had spent the weekend quietly.
Despite fears that William, a Search and Rescue pilot with RAF, may be on duty in North Wales when contractions began, he was fortunately in London - after taking a week’s leave from work - and able to accompany his wife to the hospital.
The prince had always been determined to be at his wife’s side for the birth of their first child, like his father, Prince Charles, was before him, and even had a helicopter on stand-by in his back garden in Wales in case the baby came early.
Other royal wives have not been so lucky. Prince Philip was enjoying a game of squash with his private secretary when the then Princess Elizabeth gave birth to their first born, Charles.
Buckingham Palace say that as an HRH, the youngster does not require a surname, indeed William and his brother Harry were christened using just their first names.
Its website explains: ‘For the most part, members of the Royal Family who are entitled to the style and dignity of HRH Prince or Princess do not need a surname, but if at any time any of them do need a surname (such as upon marriage), that surname is Mountbatten-Windsor.’
However William has chosen to use the surname Wales professionally in the forces, as has Harry. His children might use Cambridge in the same way, or even Wales, too, as William still retains his title Prince William of Wales as well as that of the Duke of Cambridge.
Although just hours old, the baby boy is destined to become a future head of the armed forces, supreme governor of the Church of England and head of the Commonwealth, which covers 54 nations across the world, and subsequently head of state of 16 countries across the globe.
Anticipated: A journalist broadcasts live from the palace, where the baby's name and weight will be displayed on an easel when it arrives
Business as usual: Tourists and monarchists are flooding to the palace, which will be absolutely packed as soon as the baby is born
Anticipated: A journalist broadcasts live from the palace, where the baby's name and weight will be displayed on an easel when it arrives, while tourists watch the changing of the guard
Flashback: A bogus easel similar to the one that will be used to announce the royal baby's birth is placed outside the Palace as tourists mill around

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