Harry and Meghan contact down in Australia on a business flight as four-day tour begins – and calls develop for no taxpayer assist for the millionaire couple

Prince Harry and Meghan Markle have touched down in Australia for a four-day tour of Melbourne, Canberra and Sydney.

The Duke and Duchess of Sussex were on a Qantas flight which touched down at Melbourne’s Tullamarine Airport shortly after 6.30am on Tuesday.

The four-day visit will ‘focus on mental health, community resilience, and support for veterans and their families, alongside private meetings and special projects’.

The couple’s children, six-year-old Prince Archie and four-year-old Princess Lilibet, have not joined their parents on the privately funded visit – which will not include any walkabouts to meet the public.

Harry and Meghan will also take part in private commercial engagements separate from a program of public-facing visits.

It’s the Sussexes’ first visit to Australia since 2018, where the couple announced they were expecting their first child.

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Prince Harry and Meghan Markle touch down

Prince Harry and Meghan Markle have touched down in Australia for a four-day tour of Melbourne, Canberra and Sydney.

The Duke and Duchess of Sussex were on Qantas flight QF94 from Los Angeles, which touched down at Melbourne’s Tullamarine Airport at 6.38am on Tuesday.

It’s understood they were in seats 3E and F, Sunrise reported.

The couple were met by a private convoy on the tarmac and escorted through a VIP exit before being whisked away to their hotel in the CBD.

‘It wasn’t until we got off the plane that we realised it was them,’ a US traveller on the same flight told The Age.

Another traveller described the couple as a beautiful people following a quick chat with them.

‘I said, ”I hope you have a lovely time in Melbourne and I’m sure you’ll enjoy Sydney,” she told reporters.

‘And we spoke about their children and that they were here for a couple of days.’

But not everyone was happy to see them.

‘I don’t like her (Meghan) at all,’ another traveller said.

‘Don’t come here. You don’t belong here in Australia. We don’t want them here.’

Meghan looking forward to ‘real woman-to-woman chats’ at Sydney retreat

The organiser of a ‘girls weekend’ retreat to be headlined by Meghan Markle said that the Duchess of Sussex is looking forward to ‘real woman-to-woman chats’ at the $2,699-a-head event.

Meghan will headline a women-only three-day retreat in Sydney organised by the Her Best Life podcast –  which is hosted by the Australian presenter Jackie ‘O’ Henderson and her manager Gemma O’Neill.

The event promises yoga, sound healing, meditation, a psychologist-led session, a disco evening and a ‘fireside chat’ Q&A with Meghan alongside a gala dinner which she will attend.

Guests are being charged around $2,699 for a standard ticket or up $3,199 for VIP premium packages offering more direct access to the Duchess.

Around 300 guests expected to attend the three-day event and the website states the ticket allocation has been ‘exhausted’. But there have been separate claims that not all tickets have been sold yet.

On Sunday, organiser Gemma O’Neill shared an update to her followers about her conversation with Meghan ahead of the retreat.

‘I’ve literally just got off the phone with Meghan… It couldn’t have been any more real and she was just so divine and so beautiful,’ she gushed.

Luggage spotted as Harry and Meghan prepare for their first day in Melbourne

As Harry and Meghan were ushered through a VIP entrance at Melbourne’s Tullamarine Airport and whisked away, security officers and minders escorted their luggage to a waiting vehicle to be transported to their luxury CBD hotel.

Photos showed a trolley laden with four suitcases, including one attached with a tag of the US flag.

Meghan and Harry have arrived at their hotel and are preparing for their first appearance of the day at the Royal Children’s Hospital Melbourne.

Meghan will later undertake a solo visit to a women’s shelter.

Tonight, the couple will meet with veterans and their families at Australian National Veterans’ Art Museum.

How much will the visit cost taxpayers?

The taxpayer-funded bill for Harry and Meghan’s four-day tour of Australia will likely reach six figures, according to a security expert.

‘I think it comes into the tens, possibly hundreds of thousands, because at the end of the day, it is a draw on the actual on each particular kind of state with regards to bringing the police in from normal kind of duties,’ Zero Risk security specialist Tony Loughran told Sunrise on Tuesday.

He added the Sussexes will need a high level of security.

‘He’s inevitably going to bring his team over,’ Loughran explained.

‘They’ll dovetail with private security here as well to make that connection. But then you’ve got the outer layer which is the actual police.

‘Then they’re going to come in and look at cordons. They’ll look at private venues themselves where they might need a bit of additional support. And it also is crowd control.

‘So there’s the inner core, which is the actual private security, the outer core, which is to do with intelligence, technology and so on and so forth.

‘And then the outer outer core, which is the police. So that will draw on the police resources to really to look at route corridors coming through vehicles, getting to hotels and venues and so on and so forth.

‘Even just getting off the plane and getting out of the airport, that type of thing comes at a cost.’

What are Harry and Meghan doing in Australia?

Harry and Meghan will visit Melbourne, Canberra and Sydney during their four day tour.

The visit will ‘focus on mental health, community resilience, and support for veterans and their families, alongside private meetings and special projects’.

Harry and Meghan will also take part in private commercial engagements separate from a program of public-facing visits.

Victorian Opposition Leader slams Harry and Meghan

Victorian Opposition Leader Jess Wilson has blasted the Duke and Duchess of Sussex, amid speculation taxpayers will foot some of the bill for their Melbourne visit.

She called on the state government to intervene amid mounting calls for the couple to reimburse Victoria Police for any additional security provided.

‘Victoria Police are there to provide security and safety for Victorians,’ Wilson said.

‘They are funded by the taxpayer and we are standing here today talking about the fact that they are under-resourced.

‘So any suggestion that officers are going to be pulled off duty to provide security and protection for Harry and Meghan’s visit is absolutely unacceptable, and the government needs to rule out that this is occurring.’

Libertarian MP David Limbrick added: ‘If people want to spend thousands of dollars on former royals, that’s fine.’

‘But Victorian taxpayers should not be on the hook to provide the security of millionaires.’