Alberta Premier Jason Kenney says he joined a queue with hundreds of thousands of people to pay his respects to Queen Elizabeth, whose coffin is to lie in state until her funeral.
Kenney posted a photo on Twitter of a sign saying that the wait at his point of the line was more than 14 hours.
The premier says he paid for the trip to London himself, but is in the English capital to pay respects to the late monarch on behalf of Alberta.
He says in his tweet that there is a profound sense of shared grief and affection for the queen in the huge and diverse gathering of people from around the world.
The British government has warned that the waiting time to cover the eight kilometres from the start of the line has climbed to more than 24 hours.
The queen’s body began lying in state at Westminster Hall on Wednesday and is expected to say there for visitors until Monday morning, the day of her funeral.
“I’m doing briefings and work calls from the queue, and will be back in Edmonton on Monday for Alberta’s memorial service for our late queen, who served as our head of state for well over half of Alberta’s existence,” Kenney wrote on Twitter.
With files from The Associated Press
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