![Princes William and Harry stood side by side behind the coffin for their grandmother's procession. The last time they did that was 25 years go for their mother, Princess Diana.](https://assets2.cbsnewsstatic.com/hub/i/r/2022/09/14/a4d51c84-1b02-4211-b80b-441506bd7701/thumbnail/1200x630/484398118341cc90ff32dfd99c5cd4b7/gettyimages-1243224680.jpg)
Princes William and Harry stood side by side behind the coffin for their grandmother's procession. The last time they did that was 25 years go for their mother, Princess Diana.
CBSN
Despite reports of a rift between Princes William and Harry, the brothers united in their grief on Wednesday, walking side by side behind Queen Elizabeth II's coffin during a procession from Buckingham Palace to Westminster, where the queen will lie in state until Monday's funeral. During a procession for Prince Philip's funeral last year, the brothers notably did not stand next to each other.
The last time the princes stood side by side during a funeral procession was for their mother, Princess Diana, who died in a car crash in 1997 at age 36. At the time, William was 15 and Harry was 12.
For much of that procession, the brothers walked in a line with their uncle, Charles, Earl of Spencer, between them, and with their father alongside. When they got to Westminster Abbey, the brothers stood side by side in front of the hearse that held their mother's coffin.
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New Delhi — An attack by unidentified militants in the Indian-controlled portion of the restive Himalayan region of Kashmir left nine people dead and 33 others injured Sunday, police said. Suspected terrorists opened fire on a bus carrying Hindu pilgrims, making the driver lose control and sending the bus plunging into a gorge in the mountainous region, district police said.