Prince Harry says he wants to reconcile but King Charles won’t speak to him

Prince Harry says he wants to reconcile but King Charles won’t speak to him

Due to the controversy surrounding Prince Harry leaving the British royal family in 2020, he has stated that he wants to reconcile with his family, but his father, King Charles III, will not speak to him.

Harry, who immigrated to the United States with his wife, Meghan, said he did not believe he would be able to bring his family back to the United Kingdom in an interview with the BBC on Friday.

Harry lost a legal battle to get his full police protection when he visited the UK, so the interview came out shortly after.

The prince declared, “I would love family reconciliation.” Life is precious, he says. My father has a long history, but I’m not sure how long. Due to this security-related information, he won’t be able to reach me, but reconciliation would be nice.

Although aides have been positive about Charles’ treatment is progressing, Buckingham Palace revealed last year that he had been diagnosed with an unspecified form of cancer.

In response to Harry’s interview, Buckingham Palace responded by saying that “all of these issues have been carefully and thoroughly examined by the courts, with the same conclusion being drawn every time.”

Harry’s earlier unsuccessful attempt to overturn a 2020 decision by the Home Office, the ministry responsible for policing, which stated that he would not be automatically eligible for personal police protection in the UK was rejected by London’s Court of Appeal.

The government’s decision was not unreasonable, unanimously decided by three judges on the appellate court.

On May 6, 2023, Prince Harry arrives at Westminster Abbey to celebrate King Charles’ coronation. [Photo: Andy Stenning/Pool via Reuters]

Harry’s lawyer had made compelling and moving arguments for his case in a 21-page judgment, according to Justice Geoffrey Vos. However, he claimed that the prince’s complaint against the government’s decision to deny him regular security was not legitimate.

Something may have gone wrong in the Duke of Sussex’s opinion, as he may have discovered that his decision to step down from his royal duties and spend the majority of his time abroad had a more bespoke, and generally lower, level of protection than he did when he was in the UK, Vos said.

“But that does not, by itself, constitute a legal complaint.”

Harry claimed that the Royal Household had influenced the decision in an interview with the BBC that Friday’s ruling was a “good old-fashioned establishment stitch-up.”

He claimed that his father and the government had been “used as leverage” to control him and demanded assistance from the government. The prince, who is also known as the duke of Sussex, said, “My father has a lot of control and ability in his hands.”

In the end, he could help solve the problem, not necessarily by intervening, but by leaning aside and allowing the experts to do what is necessary.

Harry, 40, the younger son of Princess Diana and Charles Charles, has opposed the royal family’s convention by challenging the press and the government.

Source: Aljazeera

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