Princess Beatrice and Eugenie facing ‘horrid time’ after lurid Prince Andrew claims

A royal expert has revealed how the York sisters would be “utterly mortified” in light of the new claims against their father, and why they haven’t defended his actions

A royal expert believes the York sisters would be struggling with the spotlight on their family after a fresh spate of allegations against Prince Andrew(Image: Getty Images)

As a wave of new allegations against Prince Andrew and Sarah Ferguson have come to light in an explosive new biography, their daughters have remained quiet throughout the scandal.

Princesses Eugenie and Beatrice have been keeping their heads down and have made no comments since the claims made in Entitled: The Rise and Fall of the House of York by Andrew Lownie went public.

While the two women have continued their philanthropic work amid the media storm around their parents, one royal expert has claimed that the sisters would be having a “very difficult” time with the spotlight once again on their family. It comes as Brits call for ‘terrified’ Prince Andrew to pay the ultimate price for scandals.

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Princess Beatrice and Princess Eugenie.
A royal expert believes Eugenie and Beatrice would be having a “difficult time” amidst the Prince Andrew allegations

In Lownie’s book, he makes wild claims about Andrew and Fergie’s turbulent relationship, the family’s finances, how the royal family at large are struggling to cope with them, and the many affairs both the Duke and Duchess of York allegedly engaged in.

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According to royal expert Ingrid Seward, who has also written biographies on the royal family, she believes both York daughters will be “finding this very difficult – it’s a horrid time”.

“I’m not surprised they haven’t come out and said anything in his defence. For his girls to show their solidarity publicly wouldn’t benefit them in any way,” Seward said, according to the Daily Mail.

Another source also suggested to the publication: “They’re keeping their distance from their dad.”

Princess Beatrice, Princess Eugenie
Ingrid Seward said for the York sisters to publicly support their father “wouldn’t benefit them”(Image: Dave Benett/Getty Images for The)

Lownie has described the explosive biography as a “tale of childhood trauma, infidelity, lust, betrayal, corruption, greed, extravagance, arrogance, entitlement, establishment cover-up and hubris”.

The timing of the book’s release conflicted with Princess Beatrice’s 37th birthday , which former BBC royal correspondent Jennie Bond said would’ve had a huge impact on her big day.

Bond also suggested that Beatrice would feel protective over her parents, and may have had to scale down her birthday celebrations as a result of the fresh allegations.

Jennie told the Mirror : “Love is blind, they say. And, in spite of all their faults, Andrew and Fergie have retained the unconditional love and loyalty of their two daughters. This week’s avalanche of lurid reports about their father, and tales of their mother’s irresponsible extravagance, will have been an unwelcome 37th birthday gift for Beatrice — but her instinct will be once again to protect her parents and ignore the noise.

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“By now, she has probably come to terms with the fact that Andrew should never have done the disastrous Newsnight interview which directly led to his downfall, and she should not have been with him or supported his decision to speak out.”

Obasanjo Library Demands ₦3.5bn Damages From EFCC Over Hotel Invasion

The last may not have been heard about the invasion of the Olusegun Obasanjo Presidential Library by operatives of the Economic and Financial Crime Commission (EFCC) as the management has handed a seven-day ultimatum to the anti-graft agency to tender an unreserved public apology for the Gestapo-like invasion of its facilities last Sunday.

While demanding thorough investigations by security operatives, the Managing Director of the outfit, Vitalis Ortese, demanded the sum of ₦3.5bn as damages for victims and the Olusegun Obasanjo Presidential Library and sought legal redress if the demands were not met within seven days.

Ortese alleged that the invasion of the premises was ultimately to attack the dignity of former President Olusegun Obasanjo. He described the invasion as “unlawful” and “a direct assault on everything this institution stands for”.

He demanded a comprehensive investigation into the incident, with reports openly published.

He noted that the invasion caused the loss of at least ₦1 billion in damages and bodily injuries suffered by those arrested.

The management threatened to seek legal redress if these demands are not met within the next seven days, starting from August 13, 2025.

“Immediate restitution for the damage caused, be made to those persons who were arrested and whose vehicle were carted away by the invasion force of the Police and EFCC, as well as for bodily injuries suffered by these persons numbering at least one hundred (100); be paid in the amount of at least One Billion Naira (N1Billion).

“We also demand that a further Two Billion and Five Hundred Million Naira (N 2.5 Billion) be paid in token acknowledgement and atonement for the immense damage caused to the reputation, business and our financial reputation as well to the reputation of our Chief Promoter.

Celebrity SAS star Harry Clark furiously hits out at Channel 4 after brutal axing

Celebrity SAS: Who Dares Wins star Harry Clark has hit out at Channel 4 after he was booted off the programme when it was revealed that he had been ‘cheating’

Harry joined a string of famous faces including Rebecca Loos and Lucy Spraggan on Celebrity SAS: Who Dares Wins(Image: Pete Dadds / Channel 4)

A Celebrity SAS: Who Dares Wins star has lashed out after being axed from the programme. Harry Clark, who won The Traitors, was kicked off the programme after it came to light he’d been “lying and cheating.”

Harry, 24, who served in the British Army as an engineer, joined the likes of Lucy Spraggan, Rebecca Loos, Bimini, Adam Collard and Conor Ben on the programme. While Tasha Ghouri, Chloe Burrows, Louie Spence, Hannah Spearritt and Adebayo ‘The Beast’ Akinfenwa, were also on the cast list but withdrew from the programme.

But Harry was dramatically kicked off the show after staff discovered he’d been lying behind their back and cutting corners. He and Loos were tasked with leading a team on a gruelling race, which involved moving a heavy rubber dinghy. But his lack of help resulted in Akinfenwa taking the majority of the bulk, sparking a flare-up with his knee issues.

Harry has spoken out after being sacked from the show
Harry has spoken out after being sacked from the show(Image: Channel 4)

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“If we get an indication that a recruit isn’t pulling their weight, we will find out,” said Jason Fox earlier in the show, before Harry was pulled in for a telling off. He was confronted after failing to complete a set of 20 burpees earlier in the challenge, instead completing just ten, and was accused of lying to their faces.

Harry has now spoken about his axing from the programme. Speaking about the scandal, he said: “Obviously I was so disheartened and so annoyed, but at the same time in the back of my head I was like, ‘but it’s all right though because I’ve made that switch, I’m here to stay’.”

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He added to The Sun: “I did exactly what I would do in the military, and that’s what annoyed me so much because it was like I just hit that switch, but they’d kicked me off for it.” Now though, he admits that he has recognised his issues and has matured since the incident, while being thankful he’s left the show.

Harry was sent packing after it emerged he'd been lying
Harry was sent packing after it emerged he’d been lying(Image: Channel 4)

Harry continued: “So it was like, well then how can I prove to you now that I’ve changed? But then at the same time, when I look back on it and I’ve matured a lot now, they’ve probably done me a favour because I know that the next big stage was the interrogation phase.”

He explained that he was in a bad way, mentally and physically and would have “broken down easy” during the intense interrogation scenes. Kicking him off the show, he says, was probably a favour as he needed to “sort” himself out. Harry says that he didn’t enjoy the experience and felt as though those on the show didn’t like him.

“I absolutely hated it while I was there,” he added. During his intense axing, Chris Oliver, who served in the forces for 17 years fumed to Harry: “Are you f***ing trying to pull the wool over my eyes?!” adding that Harry had been treating him “like an idiot”.

Mark ‘Billy’ Billingham MBE QCB, Chief Instructor, added: “No, you lied, you cut corners, I asked you three times about honesty and integrity, and what did you do?” before Harry confirmed he’d been lying.

Jason Fox explained: “I was putting pressure on six (Harry) because he wasn’t really applying himself. He was saying the odd word and I was just applying pressure, applying pressure.”

Billy confessed: “He was there but not really as a leader and he didn’t contribute anything. He made me feel you he was just f****** bluffing it. I gave him burpees and I stood right behind him and I started counting and he deliberately did ten.” An exasperated Chris interjected: “And he stood up there smiling like a Cheshire Cat after doing half the reps. I think he is taking the p*** out of us.”

Billy concluded: “His integrity and honesty stinks, to the point for me it’s unexpectable. That’s how I feel right now.”

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What are H-1B visas and how might the Trump administration change them?

President Donald Trump’s administration wants to overhaul the nation’s visa programme for highly skilled foreign workers.

If the administration does what one official described, it would change H-1B visa rules to favour employers that pay higher wages. That could effectively transform the visa into what one expert called “a luxury work permit” and disadvantage early-career workers with smaller salaries, including teachers. It could also upend the current visa programme’s lottery system used to distribute visas to eligible foreign workers.

“This shift may prevent many employers, including small and midsize businesses, from hiring the talent they need in shortage occupations, ultimately reducing America’s global competitiveness,” said David Leopold, a former president of the American Immigration Lawyers Association whose practice includes representing employers in the H-1B process.

It’s hard to find US workers in certain types of specialty fields, including software engineers and developers and some STEM positions.

A White House office proposed the change on August 8, Bloomberg Law reported. Once the proposal appears in the Federal Register – the daily public report containing notices of proposed federal rule changes – the plan will become subject to a formal public comment period. It could be finalised within months, although it is likely to face legal challenges.

Joseph Edlow, the director of US Citizenship and Immigration Services, told The New York Times in July that H-1B visas should favour companies that plan to pay foreign workers higher wages. The proposal Bloomberg Law described was in line with that goal.

PolitiFact did not see a copy of the proposal, and the White House did not respond to our questions. But the Department of Homeland Security submitted the proposed rule to a Trump administration office in July, the Greenberg Traurig law firm wrote.

Trump sought to reform the H-1B program during his first term but made limited progress. In January 2021, near the end of Trump’s term, the Department of Homeland Security published a final rule similar to the current proposal, but the Biden administration did not implement it.

Work visas were not a central part of Trump’s 2024 immigration platform, but it was a point of debate in the weeks before he took office, with billionaire businessman Elon Musk – a megadonor to Trump who would briefly serve in his administration – speaking in favour of them.

What are H-1B visas?

The H-1B visa programme lets employers temporarily hire foreign workers in specialty fields, with about two-thirds working in computer-related jobs, according to the Congressional Research Service. Most H-1B visa holders come from India, followed by China.

Currently, prospective H-1B employers must attest that they will pay the H-1B worker actual wages paid to similar employees or the prevailing wages for that occupation – whichever would result in the highest pay.

To qualify for the non-immigrant visa, the employee must hold a specialised degree, license or training required by the occupation. The status is generally valid for up to three years and renewable for another three years, but it can be extended if the employer sponsors the worker for permanent residency, which includes permission to work and live in the US.

Leopold said that the proposed change goes beyond the law’s current wage mandate.

“This statutory mechanism is designed to prevent employers from paying H-1B workers less than their American counterparts, thereby protecting US workers from displacement,” Leopold said.

Congress caps new H-1B visas at 85,000 per fiscal year, including 20,000 for noncitizens who earned advanced degrees. The government approved 400,000 H-1B applications, including renewals, in 2024, according to the nonpartisan Pew Research Center.

Amazon has led the nation’s employers since 2020 in its number of H-1B workers, Pew found.

The New York metro area received more H-1B application approvals than any other metro area; College Station, Texas had the highest concentration of approvals.

What could change with H1-B visas?

The proposed policy favours higher-paid employees, experts said.

Malcolm Goeschl, a San Francisco-based lawyer, said the rule will likely benefit tech companies, including many specialising in artificial intelligence. Such companies pay high salaries, including for entry-level positions. He said it will harm traditional tech companies’ programmes for new graduates.

“There will likely be plenty of lottery numbers available at the top of the prevailing wage scale, but very few or none at the bottom,” Goeschl said. “You may see young graduates shy away from the US labour market early on because of this. Or you could see companies just pay entry-level workers from other countries much higher salaries to get a chance in the lottery, leading to the perverse situation where the foreign workers are making a lot more money than similarly situated US workers.”

The prevailing wage requirements are designed to protect US jobs from being undercut by lower paid foreign workers.

David Bier, director of immigration studies at the libertarian Cato Institute, said the change would likely make it nearly impossible for recent immigrant college graduates, who tend to earn lower wages, to launch their careers in the United States on an H-1B visa.

“The short-term benefit would be the people who get selected are more productive, but the long-term cost might be to permanently redirect future skilled immigration to other countries,” Bier said. “It would also effectively prohibit the H-1B for many industries that rely on it. K-12 schools in rural areas seeking bilingual teachers, for instance, will have no chance under this system.”

Amid a nationwide teacher shortage, some school districts have hired H-1B visa holders, including smaller districts such as Jackson, Mississippi, and larger districts, including Dallas, Texas. Language immersion schools also often employ teachers from other countries using this visa programme.

Why is there a debate about H-1B visas?

The debate around H-1B visas does not neatly fall along partisan lines.

Proponents say the existing visa programme allows American employers to fill gaps, compete with other countries and recruit the “best minds”. Critics point to instances of fraud or abuse and say they favour policies that incentivise hiring Americans.

In December, high-profile Republicans debated the visa programme on social media.

MAGA influencer Laura Loomer denounced the programme and former Trump adviser Steve Bannon called it a “scam”. On the other side, billionaire Elon Musk, a former H-1B visa holder whose companies employ such visa holders, called for the programme’s reform but defended it as an important talent recruitment mechanism.

Trump sided with Musk.

“I have many H-1B visas on my properties,” Trump told the New York Post in late December. “I’ve been a believer in H-1B. I have used it many times. It’s a great programme.”

Senator Bernie Sanders disputed Musk, saying corporations abuse the programme as a way to get richer and should recruit American workers first.

Such visa debates have continued.

When US Representative Greg Murphy, a urologist, argued on X August 8 that the visas “are critical for helping alleviate the severe physician shortage”, thousands replied. Christina Pushaw, a Republican who works for Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, pushed back: “Why not figure out the causes of the domestic physician shortage and try to pass legislation to address those?”

Tulisa Contostavlos’ new life in country with secret ‘soul family’ after boyfriend disaster

There was a time when N’Dubz star Tulisa Contostavlos was rarely out of the headlines. Now, reflecting on her turbulent years in her new book Judgement: Love, Trials, and Tribulations, she reveals that life today looks very different

Tulisa has made some major changes in her life recently(Image: AARON PARFITT / BACKGRID)

Much of Tulisa Contostavlos’s life has been spent in the spotlight. From her early days with N-Dubz, to her stint as an X Factor judge, her solo career, her tumultuous love life, I’m A Celebrity appearance, and the famous collapse of her drug trial, the 37-year-old has consistently made headlines.

But more recently, she has opted for a different approach. Now Tulisa prioritises her happiness and wellbeing – and that has meant some dramatic changes.

The star has shared a detailed update on her new life in her new book, Judgement: Love, Trials, and Tribulations. She reveals that she has relocated to Cheshire in order to be close to her best friend Michelle McKenna, her husband Daniel and their daughter Nevaeh – Tulisa’s goddaughter.

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Tulisa Contostavlos posing in her home in Cheshire
Tulisa now lives in her dream home in Cheshire

She also prioritises time with another best friend Percy, who travels with her son to see Tulisa on the weekends – and it is this tightknit clan that means the most.

She writes: “Through our bond, Percy has in turn become very close with Michelle and Dan, and together we have become the fantastic four. Or as I like to call us, the soul family. True love is a beautiful thing; I feel extremely blessed to have it and I cherish it dearly. I have become the kind of person that would do anything for their soul family, as they would for me.”

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According to Tulisa, she is much more of an introvert these days, who embraces her quiet life in the country – bar the occasional blowout or fun holiday. Instead she says she is focused on her fitness, health, and mental wellbeing, which includes meditation, structure and routine.

For the past year, she has been living in her dream home, which she spent six months doing up, in a quiet countrified area in the middle of nowhere.

“Honestly, I’m a bit of nerd in my spare time,” she writes. “I’ve gone back to being an avid reader like I was in my teens. I’m obsessed with Ancient History and Ancient Alien theories. I’m currently on my fifth read of The Emerald Tablets of Thoth the Atlantean. I watch all things fantasy, play PlayStation and of course I still love to cook, especially in my new kitchen.”

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Tulisa Contostavlos
The star describes herself as a ‘bit of a nerd’ in her free time

And what about her love life? According to the star it’s been “chaotic enough to write another ten books”. She had an on-off relationship with a boyfriend named Jacob which lasted three years, and another with an older man she calls *Miles. After their breakup, she embarked on a three-year celibacy stint before reconciling with another ex named *Liam – and they even spent Christmas 2024 together. But it wasn’t to be and she once again briefly reconnected with Miles.

Cut to present day, and Tulisa says she is forcing herself to date again in the hopes of a fresh start. But it’s not a process she enjoys.

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“I’ve played the bachelorette for most of my life and at times it’s been a lot of fun, but I’m now 36 with 37 fast approaching and all the games haven’t brought me any real happiness, only temporary fleeting kicks of excitement and thrills,” she writes.

Cholera kills 40 as Sudan faces worst outbreak in years, says MSF

At least 40 people have died from cholera in Sudan’s Darfur region in what medical charity Doctors Without Borders, known by its French initials MSF, described as the country’s worst outbreak in years.

MSF said on Thursday that the vast western region, already devastated by more than two years of fighting between the Sudanese army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF), is bearing the brunt of an outbreak that began a year ago.

“On top of an all-out war, people in Sudan are now experiencing the worst cholera outbreak the country has seen in years,” the group said in a statement cited by the AFP news agency. “In the Darfur region alone, MSF teams treated over 2,300 patients and recorded 40 deaths in the past week.”

Nationwide, health authorities have reported 99,700 suspected cases and 2,470 deaths linked to cholera since August 2023.

The bacterial infection, transmitted through contaminated food and water, can cause severe diarrhoea, vomiting and muscle cramps. It can kill within hours without treatment, though simple oral rehydration or antibiotics can save lives.

On Wednesday, health officials launched a 10-day vaccination drive in the capital, Khartoum, to slow what aid agencies warn is a fast-moving outbreak worsened by war, mass displacement and heavy rainfall.

MSF said millions forced from their homes by the conflict now struggle to access clean water for drinking, cooking and hygiene. In Tawila, North Darfur, where about 380,000 people have fled ongoing fighting near el-Fasher, residents survive on just 3 litres (3.2qt) of water per day – less than half the emergency minimum of 7.5 litres (8qt) per person.

“In displacement and refugee camps, families often have no choice but to drink from contaminated sources and many contract cholera,” said Sylvain Penicaud, MSF’s project coordinator in Tawila. “Just two weeks ago, a body was found in a well inside one of the camps. It was removed, but within two days, people were forced to drink from that same water again.”

Since the army retook Khartoum in March, fighting has intensified in Darfur, with the RSF attempting to seize el-Fasher, the last major city in the region still under army control. The United Nations has described dire conditions for civilians trapped inside.

Heavy rains have further contaminated water sources and damaged sewage systems, MSF warned, while people fleeing the fighting are carrying the disease into neighbouring Chad and South Sudan.

MSF’s head of mission in Sudan, Tuna Turkmen, described the situation as “beyond urgent”.

“The outbreak is spreading well beyond displacement camps now, into multiple localities across Darfur states and beyond,” Turkmen said. “Survivors of war must not be left to die from a preventable disease.”