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Prince Harry visits Lesotho children
09:43, Thu Feb 28 2013
14 images in this story
Britain's
Prince Harry has visited his charity projects in Lesotho, finding time
to perform traditional dance moves with children during his return visit
to the southern African kingdom.
READ MORE: Prince Harry dances in Lesotho
He also baked a cake, attempted to learn sign language and met partially sighted children at a centre for the blind.
Photos Getty
READ MORE: Prince Harry dances in Lesotho
He also baked a cake, attempted to learn sign language and met partially sighted children at a centre for the blind.
23:41 Wed Feb 27 2013
AAP
Britain's Prince Harry
has visited his charity projects in Lesotho, finding time to perform
traditional dance moves with children during his return visit to the
southern African kingdom.
On the third day of a three-day tour, the 28-year-old stopped at the Kananelo Centre for the Deaf, where around 70 kids cheered his arrival.
He took part in a traditional dance with the students, though the locals coyly admitted that the flame-haired royal messed up the moves.
Some children also performed a mini-theatre production in sign language to show off the skills learnt at the centre, which was built with the support of the prince's NGO Sentebale.
It teaches the national curriculum in sign language and also trains life skills in the impoverished country.
The prince was given a violin-like instrument and a traditional clothing blanket.
Harry will next travel to a primary school for blind children and a community housing and water project.
The projects work with Sentebale, an organisation which Harry set up with Prince Seeiso, the younger brother of King Letsie of Lesotho.
Its name, in local language Sesotho, means "forget me not".
The third-in-line to the British throne will whisk off to Johannesburg in neighbouring South Africa the afternoon for a fund-raising gala dinner.
On the third day of a three-day tour, the 28-year-old stopped at the Kananelo Centre for the Deaf, where around 70 kids cheered his arrival.
He took part in a traditional dance with the students, though the locals coyly admitted that the flame-haired royal messed up the moves.
Some children also performed a mini-theatre production in sign language to show off the skills learnt at the centre, which was built with the support of the prince's NGO Sentebale.
It teaches the national curriculum in sign language and also trains life skills in the impoverished country.
The prince was given a violin-like instrument and a traditional clothing blanket.
Harry will next travel to a primary school for blind children and a community housing and water project.
The projects work with Sentebale, an organisation which Harry set up with Prince Seeiso, the younger brother of King Letsie of Lesotho.
Its name, in local language Sesotho, means "forget me not".
The third-in-line to the British throne will whisk off to Johannesburg in neighbouring South Africa the afternoon for a fund-raising gala dinner.
Photos Getty
Prince Harry shows off his dance moves in Lesetho.
Auckland
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