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Prince William visits Wattisham airfield to speak with soldiers

Prince William visits Wattisham airfield to speak with soldiers

BBC News3 days ago

The Prince of Wales has pledged to raise the concerns of soldiers about their accommodation. Prince William visited Wattisham flying station near Needham Market, Suffolk, to meet with men and women from the Army Air Corps (ACC) in his role as their Colonel-in-Chief.He discussed concerns about the quality of accommodation while serving bacon and sausage baps to the families of the military personnel . "I'm going to have a chat about accommodation, make sure they look at that," he told them.
The prince is a former RAF helicopter search and rescue pilot who later spent two years flying air ambulances.Wearing camouflage military uniform and the AAC's blue beret, he flew into Wattisham on a Wildcat Helicopter, a reconnaissance aircraft in the ACC's fleet.When he first arrived he entered a camouflaged covered tent, a mock-up of a mobile planning headquarters used when AAC regiments are on deployment, and got to grips with a laptop used to plan missions under the watchful eye of Lance Corporal Sulabh Ale.
'Smiles'
Talking about the accommodation, he added: "If they listen to me, that's another matter", and said the issue would be landing on a desk.When he asked another group about the issue and only received smiles in response, the prince said: "I'll take that away, a lot of smiles going on, that's all you need to say."He ended his visit by presenting a King's Commendation for Valuable Service and awarded a group of soldiers their promotion from corporal to sergeant.
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