British royals William and Kate are due to arrive in Paris on Friday in the prince’s first official visit to the French capital since his mother Diana died there, reports Capital News.
During the two-day trip, the couple will meet survivors of the 2015 terror attack on the Bataclan concert hall in Paris as well as President François Hollande.
The trip comes as William, second-in-line to the throne, is under fire in the British media for missing a Commonwealth celebration to go skiing with friends.
William, 34, and Kate, 35, will be acting as goodwill ambassadors for Britain just as the country prepares to trigger the formal process of leaving the European Union.
French magazines have described their trip, organised at the request of Britain’s foreign ministry, as a charm offensive by Britain as it prepares to break away from the European Union.
Gala magazine called them “the glamorous card to make you forget Brexit” — a tactic that will also be tested when they travel to Germany and Poland in July.
The royals will launch a initiative called “Les Voisins” (The Neighbours), celebrating relations between France and Britain.
The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge will also host a black-tie dinner at the British embassy attended by stars including “Godzilla” and “Leon” actor Jean Reno and British actress Kristin Scott Thomas, who has a home in Paris.
On Saturday, the couple will attend a Six Nations rugby match between France and Wales at the Stade de France on Saturday.
Although no official commemoration is planned during the trip, it will be impossible to escape the poignancy of Diana’s eldest son visiting the city where she died on August 31st 1997.
William was just 15 and his brother Harry 12 when their mother and her boyfriend Dodi Al-Fayed were killed after their Mercedes crashed in central Paris as it was being pursued by press photographers.