DC preparation for King Charles visit goes Down Under with Australian flag error


WASHINGTON, ⁠April 24 (Reuters) - The District of Columbia ⁠mistakenly placed several Australian flags instead ‌of British flags near the White House ahead of King Charles' U.S. visit, although the error ​was quickly corrected, a D.C. ⁠Department of Transportation ⁠official said on Friday.

Charles is also the head ⁠of ‌state for Australia, but the role is largely ceremonial.

Fifteen Australian ⁠flags were briefly included among more than ​230 ‌flags put on display to welcome the ⁠British ​king when he arrives in the U.S. capital on Monday. They were later replaced ⁠with the British flag, the ​official said.

Charles' state visit, to mark the 250th anniversary of the U.S. Declaration of Independence ⁠from British rule, is widely seen as the most high-profile trip of his reign so far.

The trip will aim to ​shore up the two ⁠allies' "special relationship," which has sunk to its ​lowest point in 70 ‌years amid strains surrounding ​the Iran war.

(Reporting by Kanishka Singh in Washington; Editing by Edmund Klamann)

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