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Queen Camilla Shares She Was Assaulted on a Train as a Teen
Summary
Queen Camilla said she was assaulted on a train when she was a teenager and that she fought back. She told the BBC the experience stayed with her for years and she has begun speaking about violence against women.
Content
Queen Camilla spoke on the BBC Today programme about an attack she experienced as a teenager. She said a man approached her on a train while she was reading, that she fought back and later left the train shaken. The memory stayed with her for many years and resurfaced when she joined a discussion about violence against women. Earlier reporting said the incident happened when she was about 16 or 17 and that she reported the attacker at Paddington station.
What was reported:
- Camilla said she was attacked on a train as a teenager and that she fought back.
- Earlier reporting indicated she was around 16 or 17 at the time and that the man was arrested after being reported at Paddington.
- She discussed the experience during a BBC programme segment on violence against women.
- Buckingham Palace did not issue an official dispute of the reported details.
Summary:
Camilla said the episode influenced her understanding of how common and under-discussed violence against women can be. She said she wants to use her public position to speak about the issue and bring people together; formal next steps were not detailed.
