First images of Kate Middleton after a month and a half ‘missing’: in a car and accompanied by her mother

Hidden behind large sunglasses and with a very serious face. So she has abandoned this Monday Wale’s princess Windsor Castle, where she had remained locked up since she was discharged from the London Clinic on January 29 after a 13-day stay due to delicate abdominal surgery. These are the first images of Kate Middleton in almost 50 days and they are, of course, not a coincidence. Kensington wanted to demonstrate with a photograph what she has been repeating without evidence for six weeks: Kate is fine.

The secrecy due to the illness and recovery of his wife William of England It has generated discomfort among the British people, institutions and also the media. The lack of information and images of the princess, added to the recent public absences of her husband, had unleashed endless rumors, each more bizarre. This Monday’s image tries to settle, once and for all, the gossip.

Kate has been photographed with her mother, Carole, who moved to Windsor last January to accompany her daughter and help her care for her three young children, George, Charlotte and Louise. She was driving the car, while the princess took the co-pilot’s place. She appears with her hair down, wearing a coat and sunglasses. Some media suggest that her face looks slightly swollen.

The rumors do not stop

The lack of information about Kate Middleton’s health has generated confusion, concern and also endless theories, supported by experts, about what could be the cause of her prolonged absence. The first ones pointed to a hysterectomy, a surgery in which the female reproductive system (uterus, ovaries, and fallopian tubes) is removed. Later there was talk of Crohn’s diseasea chronic disease that causes inflammation in the digestive tract to which, according to the medical court, a 33% degree of disability in moderate cases and up to 65% in the most severe cases corresponds.

Concha Calleja, an expert on Royal Houses, assured that the princess “is evolving not as favorably as the royal house would like her to be.” And he added: “A proof is that we do not have a single image. It is one thing if he does not come to preside over an act, and another thing is to see a tender image as we have seen of the king (Charles III). This image has not been produced by something”. Calleja stated that there was “a complication in the postoperative period. The operation was serious in itself, but in the postoperative period there were more serious complications and they had to induce a coma.” Information that was denied by some media, such as The Times.

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