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Maori welcome for Charles and Camilla

Prince Charles and his wife, the Duchess of Cornwall, arrived in New Zealand Saturday for a six-day visit marking the Diamond Jubilee of his mother, the Queen.
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Britain's Prince Charles lays a wreath as he attends the Armistice Day Commemoration at the Auckland War Memorial Museum, on Nov. 11 in the Southern Hemisphere nation.

Prince Charles and his wife, the Duchess of Cornwall, arrived in New Zealand Saturday for a six-day visit marking the Diamond Jubilee of his mother, the Queen.

The couple, who flew from Australia on the last leg of their three-nation Pacific tour, arrived at a New Zealand Air Force base near Auckland to a welcome from a brass band and Prime Minister John Key, accompanied by his wife, Bronagh.

Elizabeth is head of state of the country, a former British colony. Support for the monarchy remains strong in New Zealand, according to a survey of 1,000 people taken by Television New Zealand on the eve of the visit.

It found only 19 per cent of those surveyed favored the country ditching the monarchy to become a republic, down from 25 per cent in a similar poll four years ago.

An overwhelming 74 per cent want to retain the queen as head of state. The remaining 7 per cent were unsure.

Although Charles has been to New Zealand a number of times - including with his former wife, Princess Diana and their firstborn son, William, when he was a baby - it is Camilla's first visit.

They will be given a traditional Maori welcome at the Auckland War Memorial Museum today.

Their first official engagement will be to attend a service commemorating Armistice Day 1918, which ended hostilities in World War I.

More than 100,000 New Zealanders served overseas during World War I, at a time when the population was about 1 million. More than 18,000 died and 41,000 were wounded.

The royal couple will lay a wreath on behalf of the Queen and then meet New Zealand veterans of the Second World War and later conflicts, including Vietnam, at the museum.

Their tour will also take them to Wellington, the small agricultural town of Feilding and the earthquake-ravaged South Island city, Christchurch.