Prince Harry, Meghan and Archie arrive in Cape Town for first leg of their Africa tour

CAPE TOWN, SOUTH AFRICA - SEPTEMBER 23: Meghan, Duchess of Sussex and Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex meet young wellwishers as they visit a Justice Desk initiative in Nyanga township, during their royal tour of South Africa on September 23, 2019 in Cape Town, South Africa. The Justice Desk initiative teaches children about their rights and provides self-defence classes and female empowerment training to young girls in the community. (Photo by Chris Jackson/Getty Images)
Harry, Meghan and Archie arrive in South Africa
02:00 - Source: CNN

What we covered:

  • Britain’s Duke and Duchess of Sussex arrived in South Africa with baby Archie in tow, kicking off their first official tour as a family.
  • The 10-day trip will take in four countries: South Africa, Botswana, Angola and Malawi.
  • Meghan and Archie will visit South Africa while Harry travels further afield.
  • Royal engagements on day 1 of the trip included a township visit and a walkabout.
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That's a wrap for day one of Meghan and Harry's royal tour to southern Africa

Prince Harry and Meghan concluded their first day in South Africa with a stop at the District Six Homecoming Center, where they were met by a small group of former residents of the neighborhood.

They joined a cooking activity and sampled some of the cuisine before departing.

We’re wrapping things up here too. We’ll be back with more from the royal visit tomorrow.

In the meantime, here are 8 things to watch for on the tourin the coming days.

A brush with royalty

Joseph Bouman (far left, in glasses) and Alfonzo Solomon (second left, in yellow t-shirt) met the Duke and Duchess of Sussex in Cape Town on Monday.

Alfonzo Solomon, 37, waited in District Six all afternoon with his friend, Joseph Bouman, for a glimpse of the royal couple.

Hours later, he says his wildest dreams came true when the Duke and Duchess came over and shook his hand.

“It was literally an out of body experience,” Solomon, who works in the film industry, told CNN. “We saw them coming out of the museum, the whole crowd went crazy and then they slowly started walking towards us.”

He said Bouman put out his hand and Prince Harry came straight over and shook it, then shook his hand too.

“Meghan gave me a very nice smile,” said Bouman, 47, principal at a local high school. “I’m never going to wash this hand again!” he added with a chuckle.

A right royal run in

Tarryn Josephs, center, chats excitedly about her meeting with Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, in Cape Town

Tarryn Josephs is a local journalist in Cape Tow; today, though, she is here not to report, but as an enthusiastic royal fan.

Josephs says she has adored the royal couple for years — and was rewarded for her admiration when the Duchess came over while walking down the street.

“She said my name!” She squealed with delight in the moments after. “I asked her to say my name and she did!”

Standing next to her is Rene and Ludwig Brink.

“She took the flowers from my son! My son gave her our national flower and she took it and said thank you very much,” Rene tells CNN excitedly.

“They are lovely, so lovely. I’m so happy that they are here. We’ve been here since 10 o’clock this morning, but it was worth the wait.”

Meghan and Harry arrive at District Six Museum

The Duke and Duchess of Sussex have made it to District Six in Cape Town.

As the couple’s convoy pulled up at the District Six Museum, the large crowd that had gathered to greet them briefly fell silent.

Then, as Harry and Meghan emerged from their car, royal fans immediately broke out in rapturous cheering, whistles and screams.

The pair stopped to wave before being greeted by museum director Bonita Bennett.

Inside, the pair will be shown an interactive map explaining the neighborhood’s history under apartheid. In celebration of the area’s creative background, a jazz musician and former resident of the area will show them around various exhibits.

They will then depart by for a short walk to the District 6 Homecoming Centre one block away.

Excited crowd waits patiently for royal couple's arrival

Sue Freeling, pictured far right, stands with the Roxanne Naidoo, her daughter Michaela Grace, husband Mark and family member Nigel Govindamsami.

Sue Freeling, a Cape Town resident of 25 years, is one of those who has come downtown today in the hopes of catching a glimpse of the royal couple.

She says what draws her to the couple is the fact they seem so genuine. 

“[Meghan] is representing being a mother, being a wife and woman of color in the royal family — it’s fantastic,” Sue told CNN. 

She is an enthusiastic fan of the royals, and says Diana’s legacy continues to be remembered fondly here in South Africa. She adds that Harry has links here as well.

Standing next to her, a young family can’t help but get caught up in the excitement. 

Roxanne Naidoo, her husband Mark and daughter Michaela Grace, from Durban, are in Cape Town to see a family member, but said they couldn’t miss an opportunity to participate in the royal visit. 

“We were just talking and saying abuse against women, it’s really good to know that she has added that to her [part] of the royal tour,” Roxanne told CNN. “That’s what South African women need to hear.”

“If I could say anything to them, I’d say thank you.” 

Well-wishers wait for Harry and Meghan in downtown Cape Town

Crowds wait for a glimpse of the royal couple.

Outside the District Six museum in Cape Town, lines of royal fans have started to arrive and grab spots behind the cordon in anticipation of Harry and Meghan’s arrival.

Sussexes head off for their next engagement

The Sussexes have now departed Nyanga township and are headed to their next engagement in District Six, a former inner-city mixed-race neighborhood where freed slaves, migrants, workers and merchants lived alongside each other for decades.

In 1966, the government declared it a whites-only area and more than 60,000 residents were forcibly removed and relocated to the Cape Flats township.

Meghan tells victims of gender-based violence: "I am here for you"

Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, makes a speech as she visits a Justice Desk initiative in Nyanga township with Prince Harry during their royal tour of South Africa on September 23, 2019.

Meghan, the Duchess of Sussex has hailed the “incredible work” done by a South African community group to combat gender-based violence.

“You are incredible and what you are doing is so powerful because you are so powerful,” she told workers and volunteers at the Justice Desk in Cape Town’s Nyanga township. “The work that is being done here to keep women and children safer is needed more than ever.”

Meghan said she and Prince Harry had been following South Africa’s gender violence crisis as much as they could from afar, but that they were keen to learn more now that they were in the country. 

“We are eager to learn and see first hand the vital work that you’re doing … on the ground to make the change, not just that you need but also deserve.” 

“On one personal note, may I just say that while I’m here with my husband as a member of the royal family, I want you to know that for me, I am here has a mother, as a wife, as a woman, as a woman of color and as your sister,” she added.

Harry: It's time to redefine masculinity

Meghan, Duchess of Sussex and Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex meet well-wishers during a visit to The Justice Desk. Source: Getty Images.

Visiting a project that provides self-defense classes and female empowerment training to girls and young women on the first day of a royal visit to South Africa, Prince Harry says it is time to rethink what masculinity means.

“Touching on what your president said last week: No man is born to cause harm to women. This is learned behavior and a cycle that needs to be broken,” the Prince told a cheering crowd outside Nyanga Methodist Church in Cape Town.

Beaming from ear to ear, Harry thanked the crowds of well-wishers who had gathered in Nyanga township to welcome him and Meghan, the Duchess of Sussex.

“I wanted to ensure that our first visit as a family, with my wife by my side, focused on the significant challenges facing millions of South Africans, while acknowledging the hope that we feel so strongly,” he told the crowd.

Harry said the couple was “incredibly grateful” to have the chance to listen and learn about “the issues that define your daily lives in these communities.”

“That’s what this is – a community. A community where men and women have a vital role to play.”

Royals dancing in the streets of South Africa

Meghan and Harry appear to be getting in the swing of things, just hours after touching down in South Africa.

The couple don’t seem to be letting the jet lag get them down, joining in the dancing in the sunshine outside Nyanga Methodist Church in Cape Town:

Royal couple chat to locals after touching down in South Africa

Harry and Meghan have arrived

The Duke and Duchess of Sussex have begun the first engagement on their 10-day tour of southern Africa.

Enthusiastic cheers and shouts greeted the royal couple as they arrived at Nyanga Methodist Church in Nyanga township, Cape Town, on Monday afternoon.

The couple spent several minutes greeting members of the community connected to the Justice Desk initiative while musicians and dancers continued to perform in the church courtyard.

Meghan excitedly chatted to several women and embraced a number of them outside the church.

Meanwhile Harry bent down to talk to children sat on the floor, all of whom were beaming at the opportunity to meet a special visitor.

First up: The Duke and Duchess of Sussex head to Nyanga township

With no formal arrival ceremony, Harry and Meghan will kick off their first visit to South Africa together with a visit to Nyanga township where they will attend a workshop put together by Justice Desk, a human rights organization that operates in South Africa, Zambia and Zimbabwe.

The organization educates children about their rights, self-awareness and safety, and provides self-defense classes and female empowerment training to young girls in the community.

The couple will meet Jessica Dewhurst, Justice Desk’s founder and a Queen’s Young Leader, and Theodora Luthuli, one of the group’s community leaders.

The engagement will begin with the students reciting “Our Deepest Fear,” the club’s anthem, before the girls break off into four training groups.

Ahead of their arrival at Nyanga Methodist Church, where the event is due to take place, children were dancing and singing in the sunshine while the media gathered nearby.

Into the "red zones"

When Prince Harry and Meghan Markle touch down in Cape Town, they will be landing in an unequal city in the world’s most unequal country.

There is the Cape Town the world knows: Table Mountain; the wineries; the spectacular beaches. And then there is the other side of Cape Town, where murder rates are high and gang violence grips communities. 

“They are holding the community hostage,” said Abdul Waheem Martin, the leader of an ambulance crew that services the Cape Flats.

“If you are looking at these areas, every person’s house has got burglar bars on the inside and on the outside – their homes look like a prison cell. These people are scared.”

The South African Apartheid government created the “Flats,” as they are commonly known, when it forced non-white South Africans out of large areas of the city center and its suburbs.

The royal couple will visit some of these areas, where security is such a concern to the organizers that even journalists covering the event won’t know where they are headed until the last minute.

Crime is so endemic here that even ambulance crews were attacked and robbed more than 80 times in 2018. Martin and his team now need police escorts to enter so-called “red zones” – even if it means patients will die because of the wait.

“It is frustrating – the guys get restless sitting here. Because we know that there is someone that seriously needs our immediate medical attention and unfortunately because of the situation we can’t get to the patient quick enough,” said Martin. 

Teenager Naasief died in 2016, shot as he stood outside a store near his home in the township.

“He was my pillar of strength. He was my blessing,” says his mother, Shannaz.

Shannaz and other mothers who have lost sons to violence in the “Flats” say the gangs present young kids with an awful choice.

“In most cases the children don’t want to be in a situation. But they are forced to be in a situation. You get killed or you must go kill,” she said.

Meghan will give away some of Archie’s toys during tour of South Africa

Meghan, Duchess of Sussex greets the public at the public walkabout at the Rotorua Government Gardens on October 31, 2018 in Rotorua, New Zealand.

The Duchess of Sussex has brought some of the many gifts and toys given to baby Archie to donate to babies and children in need during her visit to South Africa this week, a royal source has told CNN.

Why are the Sussexes in South Africa?

Meghan, Duchess of Sussex and Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex watch students play football during their visit to Morocco on February 24, 2019.

Harry and Meghan’s trip to South Africa will “celebrate” the relationship the country has with the UK, British High Commissioner Nigel Casey said ahead of the royal couple’s arrival in Cape Town on Monday.

The royals are on a 10-day tour in southern Africa that will see them visit Cape Town together before Harry continues on to Botswana, Angola and Malawi for additional engagements.

Meghan and Archie will only visit South Africa. They will be reunited with Harry in Johannesburg upon his return from Malawi.

“Visits like this play can important part in celebrating, sustaining and renewing what is a dynamic, modern relationship between the UK and South Africa,” Casey said. “The UK has also historically been a leading investor in South Africa and we are determined to do all we can to sustain that.”

“But the real strength of this relationship lies in people,” Casey added. “430,000 Brits visit South Africa every year – more than from any other country – spending over 500 million pounds here a year, and thus making a big direct contribution to the South African economy.

“We estimate some 200,000 British passport holders live and work in South Africa playing a big role in the economy and society. So this visit is going to reflect and celebrate those people-to-people links.”

The diplomat added that the trip was “an opportunity to shine a light on some of the issues close to the hearts of the Duke and Duchess, and of real importance to South Africans.”

“It will also be a chance to underline the strength and continuity of our royal family’s ties to South Africa and in particular to recall the warm and special relationship between Her Majesty the Queen and the late President Mandela,” he said.

Meghan and Harry fly commercial to South Africa

The Duke and Duchess of Sussex on October 26, 2018 in Fua'amotu, Tonga. 

Prince Harry and his wife Meghan have traveled to Africa with their baby son Archie on a commercial flight, a royal source told CNN.

The family’s decision to fly commercial comes after they were criticized for using private jets to fly to the south of France and Ibiza for two trips during the summer.

Environmental campaigners accused the pair of hypocrisy, saying that Harry and Meghan’s actions contradict their public stance on climate change, given that aviation is one of the world’s major polluters and is responsible for more than 2% of global emissions.

The pair have tried to redeem themselves since, with Harry launching a global sustainable travel initiative, known as Travalyst, in recent weeks.

Harry responded to the backlash over his summer travels at the launch, telling reporters that he spends “99% of my life traveling the world by commercial,” according to Britain’s PA Media news agency.

He added that “occasionally, there needs to be an opportunity based on a unique circumstance to ensure that my family are safe – it’s generally as simple as that,” PA Media reported.

Day 1: What's on the agenda?

The Cape Town leg of Harry and Meghan’s tour begins Monday with an education workshop at a township, where they will meet local children and members of the public.

A world away from the picture postcard views of Table Mountain and the city’s scenic beaches, the townships are some of Cape Town’s poorest neighborhoods, and are rife with gang violence.

Later the pair will head to District Six, a former inner-city residential area where freed slaves, artisans, immigrants, merchants and the Cape Malay community lived for decades.

In 1966, the government declared District Six a whites-only area, and more than 60,000 residents were forcibly removed and relocated to the Cape Flats Township.

Meghan and Harry will visit the museum there and learn about the history of District Six, before walking to the nearby Homecoming center and meeting some of the area’s former residents.

We won't see the family arrive in South Africa

Just in case you were waiting for it, it’s worth noting that there will be no formal arrival ceremony for the family when they land in Cape Town on Monday.

Instead the first time we’ll see Harry and Meghan is at their first engagement at one of Cape Town’s townships. Exactly which township they’re visiting has yet to be revealed publicly for security reasons.

The Sussexes head to Africa

Britain’s Duke and Duchess of Sussex are on their first official overseas tour with their four-month-old son Archie. The trip gets underway in the coastal city of Cape Town, South Africa, on Monday.

The family is visiting southern Africa on behalf of the UK Foreign and Commonwealth Office, to help strengthen relations and raise awareness of a number of causes close to the royal couple’s hearts.

“The Duke of Sussex’s love for Africa is well known,” a Buckingham Palace spokeswoman said. “He first visited the continent at the age of 13, and more than two decades later the people, culture, wildlife and resilient communities continue to inspire and motivate him every day.”

The ten-day trip will be made extra special for the couple as it is the first time Meghan has visited South Africa.

It is also the first time little Archie will be making an official public appearance. It is unknown exactly when he will join his parents but a royal source has told CNN that the pair are keen for him to participate.

After a few days in Cape Town, Harry will travel on to Botswana, Angola and Malawi before being reunited with his wife and son in Johannesburg early next week.