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Prince William returning to the skies

By Agence France-Presse in London | China Daily | Updated: 2014-08-09 07:41

Prince William returning to the skies

Britain's Prince William, sitting in the cockpit of a helicopter at RAF Valley in Anglesey, Wales, will train for about five months as a helicopter pilot with the East Anglian Air Ambulance, Britain's royal officials announced on Thursday. If successful, he will join the group, based in Cambridge, next spring. Sac Faye Storer / Associated Press

Britain's Prince William will get back behind the controls of a helicopter and become an air ambulance pilot, his office announced on Thursday.

William, the Duke of Cam-bridge, is to be based at an airport in Cambridge, England, responding to emergencies ranging from traffic accidents to heart attacks.

If he passes all the required tests, the 32-year-old should get a full-time position next year with the East Anglian Air Ambulance, a charity that provides emergency helicopter coverage across eastern England.

In September last year, the prince, second in line to the throne, completed a three-year stint as a Royal Air Force search-and-rescue helicopter pilot in northwest Wales.

"The duke is greatly excited by this opportunity," a Kensington Palace spokesman said.

"He regards his work with the RAF search-and-rescue force as having been an exceptional privilege, and is hugely motivated by the idea of being able to continue to help people in difficult and challenging situations."

In his new job, William, his wife, Kate, and their son, Prince George, who turned 1 year old last month, are expected to split their time between their newly refurbished Kensington Palace apartment in London and AnmerHall, a country house on Queen Elizabeth II's private Sandringham estate in Norfolk, eastern England.

Cambridge lies between the two.

The new role will be the prince's main job but his rotation will take into account his royal duties in Britain and abroad.

Road crashes make up the majority of the air ambulance's call outs, but it also has to respond to sports injuries and other accidents.

"The pilot is part of the team, and he will be looking after patients with conditions that would be horrifying for many, and some pilots may not like that very much," said the EAAA's medical director, Alastair Wilson.

"Compared to his role as a search-and-rescue pilot, he may be dealing with more injury patients than he is used to, but I'm sure he will adapt very well to that."

Starting in September, the royal will have to undergo at least five months of civilian pilot training followed by 14 exams and a flight test, plus specific emergency response training.

If he passes, he will start as a copilot but after further training would become a helicopter commander.

Each helicopter carries a pilot, a doctor and a paramedic. William would work four days on, four days off.

Each day he will have to check his aircraft over and be aware of the local weather conditions.

He is thought to be the first royal directly in line to inherit the throne to sign a job contract with a civilian employer.

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