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Australia remembers 'friend' Prince Philip

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Flags across Australia and the Commonwealth are at half mast, marking the death of Prince Philip.
Camera IconFlags across Australia and the Commonwealth are at half mast, marking the death of Prince Philip. Credit: AAP

AUSTRALIA REMEMBERS PRINCE PHILIP, DUKE OF EDINBURGH

* A 41-gun salute will take place at federal Parliament House at 5pm Saturday, including 21 rounds for a royal salute plus 20 rounds (added when the salute takes place in a "royal park"), all at 10-second intervals

* Australian flags around the globe are flying at half mast

* Federal parliament will pass a condolence motion when it next sits in May

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* Prime Minister Scott Morrison and Governor-General David Hurley sign a condolence book at Sydney's Admiralty House

* Former prime minister John Howard has remembered a man who "gave short shrift to political correctness when he encountered it"

* Former prime minister and republican Malcolm Turnbull: "He found a lot of these official engagements boring. And a lot of the so-called gaffes and outrageous statements was a way of making it interesting for him ... 'I'm bored witless, I might as well say something that will at least give me a laugh'."

* Victorian Governor Linda Dessau laid a wreath in Melbourne

* Brisbane landmarks will be lit in red, white and blue on Saturday evening

* Former governor-general Peter Cosgrove says the prince was "an obvious friend and admirer of Australia"

* The Australian Conservation Foundation, which the duke headed between 1971 and 1976, thanked Prince Philip for his efforts to raise awareness about environmental issues in Australia and around the world

* Federal Opposition Leader Anthony Albanese said Prince Philip had lived "a long and truly remarkable life"

* The Australian Republic Movement offered its condolences to the royal family

* Anglican Diocese of Sydney Bishop Peter Hayward acknowledged "a marriage of over 70 years' standing and a life of service to the Commonwealth through war and peace".

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