World
This is the secret code word for when The Queen dies
The day that the Queen dies will see a nation in mourning.
But the plan for what will happen afterwards has already been meticulously laid out.
In fact, there is a code
word that will be used to deliver the sad and tragic news to the upper
echelons of the Government that will signify her passing and the
starting of what happens next – ‘London Bridge is down.’
According to the Guardian the Prime Minister of the time will be woken if they are asleep, and will be told by civil servants: “London Bridge is down.”
This message will signify to the PM that Queen Elizabeth II has passed away, kicking off a highly-organised series of events that will eventually lead up to the monarch’s funeral.
Once the Prime Minister
has been told, the Foreign Office, from an undisclosed location in
London, will inform 15 governments outside of the UK where the Queen is
also the head of state.
The Global
Response Centre will also pass on the news to the 36 other nations of
the Commonwealth for whom the Queen has served as a symbolic figurehead.
As for the general public, the media has already planned the details in how to break the news and start a period of mourning.
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Andy Wells,Yahoo News UK
Thu, Mar 16 2:29 AM PDT
World
This is the secret code word for when The Queen dies
The day that the Queen dies will see a nation in mourning.
But the plan for what will happen afterwards has already been meticulously laid out.
In fact, there is a code
word that will be used to deliver the sad and tragic news to the upper
echelons of the Government that will signify her passing and the
starting of what happens next – ‘London Bridge is down.’
According to the Guardian the Prime Minister of the time will be woken if they are asleep, and will be told by civil servants: “London Bridge is down.”
This message will signify to the PM that Queen Elizabeth II has passed away, kicking off a highly-organised series of events that will eventually lead up to the monarch’s funeral.
Once the Prime Minister
has been told, the Foreign Office, from an undisclosed location in
London, will inform 15 governments outside of the UK where the Queen is
also the head of state.
The Global
Response Centre will also pass on the news to the 36 other nations of
the Commonwealth for whom the Queen has served as a symbolic figurehead.
As for the general public, the media has already planned the details in how to break the news and start a period of mourning.
MORE: Vets warn dog-owners that dressing their pets in coats, hats and SHOES is bad for their skin
MORE: Islam to overtake Christianity as world’s biggest religion by 2070
MORE: Islam to overtake Christianity as world’s biggest religion by 2070
Where previously
the BBC was the first to reveal the death of a monarch, modern
technology and social media has effectively destroyed that monopoly.
Instead, a newsflash will be sent to the Press Association, as well as the rest of the world’s media at exactly the same time.
A footman in
mourning clothes will be sent out of a door at Buckingham Palace at the
same time to pin a notice of the tragic news to the gates, while the
official palace website will feature just one page, displaying the news
on a dark background.
Newspapers and
their respective websites will already have several stories ready to
run, written in advance so that they can go up as soon as the news
breaks.
Television news,
including Sky and ITN, have already signed up various royalty experts to
chat to them exclusively, while rehearsals on delivering the news that
have taken place for years will finally be put into action.
Unsurprisingly,
newsreaders will be wearing black suits and outfits, while regular
television coverage will be cancelled to switch to the news that will
dominate channels for weeks, if not months.
Commercial radio
stations have blue lights that begin flashing in the wake of a national
tragedy – these will alert DJs to switch to the news and play
“inoffensive music” in the lead up to the announcement to millions
listening in cars and trains across the country.
A
former BBC head of news told the Guardian that the organisation and
planned mourning period will be needed so people can grieve for “the
only monarch that most of us have ever known”.
Everything
that has been rehearsed for years will be meticulously played out – and
you will remember exactly where you were when the Queen died.
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