Prince Harry’s weakness exposed as he ‘learns hard lesson’ in latest crushing blow

A charity that Prince Harry helps to spearhead has hit the headlines after an African country cut close links with it – and one expert believes it might be a lesson for the Duke of Sussex

Prince Harry may have stepped out with wife Meghan in New York City, highlighting charitable causes in the Big Apple. But the Duke of Sussex has seemingly suffered a series of blows when it comes to his charitable endeavours in Africa.

Earlier this year, he stepped down from Sentebale, an organisation he founded to help children orphaned by Aids in Botswana and Lesotho, following a public war of words with its chairwoman Dr Sophie Chandauka, who levelled accusations of bullying and harassment against the duke, which he denied. And last week it emerged that an African wildlife charity part run by the Duke of Sussex has seen its mandates to manage key animal reservations in Chad withdrawn by the country’s government.

READ MORE: Prince Harry and Meghan Markle take to the stage for powerful chat after receiving awardREAD MORE: Meghan Markle and Prince Harry steal Kate’s thunder in shock move on rare joint visit

African Parks managed 22 national parks and protected areas across 12 countries, including two wildlife reserves in Chad – the Ennedi Natural and Cultural Reserve and the Greater Zakouma Ecosystem, which includes the Zakouma and Siniaka-Minia national parks.

But the non-profit organisation, of which Harry is a board member and former president, said on Tuesday that the Chadian government had ended its mandates to manage the wildlife reserves.

A minister from the country said in a statement that the charity had showed “a recurring indelicate and disrespectful attitude toward the government”. According to royal expert Jennie Bond, Harry “certainly isn’t having much luck with his charity work in Africa”.

And she believes it could be a wake-up call. The former BBC royal correspondent told the Mirror : “Although he doesn’t seem to be directly implicated in this latest fallout, the Chad Government does cite what it perceives to be his charity’s ‘arrogant and disrespectful behaviour’.

“I think he has probably now learned that setting up charities and managing them successfully is a complex business. And, through no fault of his own, Harry doesn’t have much experience of running a business.”

In response to Chad cutting ties, African Parks said it is in talks to “better understand the government’s position” and “explore the best way forward to support the continued protection of these critical landscapes”.

The charity added: “African Parks will continue to keep its partners and stakeholders informed, as further clarity is obtained.”

Article continues below

And Jennie added: “Perhaps Harry would be better advised in future to use his platform, and it is a powerful and influential platform, to support established charities and causes he believes in — without getting involved in their management.

“He already does that with the WellChild Awards, and his attendance is hugely valuable in every way. Having said that, his Invictus Games are an undoubted success and go from strength to strength. So he must be doing something right!”

Princess Eugenie left empty seat next to Prince Andrew at her wedding due to strict rule

On this day seven years ago, Eugenie tied the knot with Jack Brooksbank, with one empty seat in St George’s Chapel drawing in a lot of attention for one key reason

Today, Princess Eugenie and her husband Jack Brooksbank are celebrating their seventh wedding anniversary.

Prince Andrew and Sarah Ferguson’s youngest daughter tied the knot with Brooksbank, a British marketing executive, on October 12 2018, exchanging their vows in St George’s Chapel in Windsor Castle in front of the entire royal family, including the late Queen.

More than 850 people, including Robbie Williams and Cara Delevigne, packed into the chapel to see Eugenie and Jack get married, but if you look closely, you can see one prime seat at the front of the chapel in front of the former monarch was left empty, despite the packed guestlist.

READ MORE: Meghan Markle quietly releases new As Ever product before dramatic Paris tripREAD MORE: Supernanny delivers verdict on Prince William and Kate Middleton’s parenting style

While the empty seat drew a lot of attention, it wasn’t because of a last minute no-show on the big day. It was, however, due to a decades long royal tradition held by the late Queen.

That’s because traditionally the monarch and the rest of the royals sit on the right-hand-side of the quire in St George’s Chapel. Her late Majesty is said to have preferred to sit in the second row of seats, as, according to The Sun , she found the front row uncomfortable.

With tradition dictating that no one is allowed to sit in front of the Queen and obstruct her view, this is why the seat – possibly the best seat in the house – was left empty.

The same seat was also left empty months earlier when Prince Harry and Meghan Markle married in the same chapel, and in 2022 when a committal service for the late Queen was held there on the day of her funeral, an empty space was left in the row in front of King Charles .

However, there was one key member of the royal family missing on Eugenie’s wedding day – Queen Camilla . Instead, she attended a school harvest festival in Scotland , which she had agreed to make an appearance at before Eugenie’s wedding date had been confirmed.

On her big day, Eugenie opted for a dress that featured a low-cut back while also deciding to not wear a veil. She said she wanted to change the perception of “beauty” by showing off the scoliosis scar on her spine.

Article continues below

Eugenie underwent surgery at just 12 years old at the Royal National Orthopaedic Hospital so titanium could be added to repair the curvature that had been caused by her scoliosis. “You can show people your scars and it’s really special,” she previously told This Morning. “I think you can change the way beauty is, and you can show people your scars and I think it’s really special to stand up for that.”

Since marrying in 2018, Eugenie and Jack have welcomed two children – August, who was born in February 2021 and Ernest, who arrived in late May 2023.

‘I thought it was a heart attack’ – how collapse changed Kirby’s life

Getty Images

Fran Kirby felt for a while that something wasn’t right – the fatigue, the nausea, the persistent brain fog. But it wasn’t until she collapsed in her hallway that the symptoms became impossible to ignore.

She regained consciousness thanks to a slap across the face and was told paramedics were on their way.

“I just got really, really extreme chest pain. Like something that I’ve never, ever experienced before,” Kirby told BBC Sport.

“I didn’t know what was going on. My head started to get really dizzy and I remember just saying that I’ve got to go and sit down.

“I got up, walked across the kitchen and then basically just completely collapsed in the hallway, like passed out completely.

“I thought I was having a heart attack.”

The next day she was diagnosed with pericarditis – an inflammation of the fluid-filled sac around the heart. The condition typically causes chest pain and fever.

Kirby’s collapse came in November 2019 and she was sidelined for 10 long months.

A full recovery and comeback followed, and the five years since her return have been fruitful for one of the most gifted players to represent the Lionesses in recent times.

She added eight trophies to her collection with Chelsea, lifted the Euros trophy with the Lionesses, and then signed for Brighton. Five months ago – shortly before England retained their European title in Switzerland – she retired from international football for good.

Having considered ending her career early because of her heart condition, the return to action has delivered more than she could have ever imagined.

“There’s been times where I feel I’m not going to do this any more,” Kirby said of her career.

“I’m not going to do this to my family any more, I’m not going to put them through it, I’m not going to put myself through it.

‘I was crying down the phone on Christmas Eve’

To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.

Kirby’s diagnosis did not mean the end. Instead, it marked the start of a new challenge: a long, difficult journey back to full fitness and health.

“I didn’t know what to do with myself. I was agitated, I was so poorly,” she said.

“I would be on really strong medication, which I didn’t really agree with in the beginning, but I knew it was the only medication I could take. So I was just forcing it.”

She leant on support from Chelsea.

“I remember on Christmas Eve [2019] I called our doctor, Francisco, who was incredible during the process, and I called him crying down the phone – I was like, ‘I don’t know what to do. I am so ill. I am so tired all the time.’ I was sleeping 16, 17 hours a day.”

Football was almost the last thing on Kirby’s mind.

“My thought process wasn’t ‘I want to feel better to play football’, my thought process was ‘I want to be better’,” she said.

“Even if I can’t play football again, even if I can’t go for a run again, I don’t want to have a dull, achy pain in my chest.”

Kirby said her illness was a “real eye-opener” and gave her a new appreciation for life’s simple moments as she got better.

“Walking the dogs, that was just so exciting for me,” she added.

‘The pain in my chest was terrifying’

Fran Kirby of Chelsea poses for a photo with the PFA Players' Player of the Year award in 2021Getty Images

Since her illness, Kirby, who was in her early teens when she tragically lost her mother to a brain haemorrhage, has been “a lot more cautious” about her health.

She takes extra care with rest and recovery as pericarditis can occur after a viral infection, such as a cold or flu.

“I obviously had got ill and then came back too early to try and play, and then it just kind of attacked that specific part of my body,” Kirby said.

“I hadn’t been feeling well for a while, but I kind of just put it down to… I’m a footballer – I’m going to be fatigued, I train every day, I go to the gym, I’m going to be tired.”

Kirby emerged as a youngster at Reading, scoring at a rate of more than a goal a game, a supremely talented forward who earned England caps and played in a World Cup while with her hometown club, before joining Chelsea in July 2015.

Her recovery from the hallway collapse was carefully managed, and Kirby returned the following season with a vengeance – scoring 16 goals and assisting 11 more in just 18 league matches for Chelsea. Those performances earned her the PFA’s Players’ Player of the Year award.

These days, she is particularly careful if she feels her body needs a break.

“I wouldn’t say I’m scared, but aware. I don’t want to have that pain in my chest ever again. It was terrifying,” said Kirby, who is now in her second season with Brighton.

“So whenever I get ill. [When people say] ‘Fran’s not in again’, I’m like, yeah, because I’ve gone through that. I don’t want to experience that again. I need to allow my body to recover.”

But even with a more measured approach to her football, Kirby – who was nicknamed ‘Mini Messi’ by former England boss Mark Sampson – still feels the pressure.

“Everyone expects a certain level when I play,” she said. “And that comes as part and parcel of obviously playing for Chelsea, playing for England, winning all of these things.

Related topics

  • Football
  • Women’s Football

More on this story

    • 4 June
    Fran Kirby with the Euro 2022 trophy
    • 10 January 2024
    Fran Kirby

Haaland scores three as Norway crush Israel amid pro-Palestinian protest

Erling Haaland scored a hat-trick to pass 50 international goals in record time as Norway cruised to a 5-0 thrashing of Israel, edging closer to qualifying for a first FIFA World Cup finals since 1998.

Before the Saturday night match in Oslo, hundreds of people attended a pro-Palestinian demonstration, chanting “Free Palestine” to protest against Israel’s “genocide” in Gaza, AFP journalists reported.

Recommended Stories

list of 4 itemsend of list

Norwegian police dispersed a gathering of pro-Palestinian activists with tear gas and made several arrests.

Inside the Ullevaal Stadium, several dozen Israeli fans waved their country’s flag and a banner reading “Let the Ball Talk!”.

Norway now lead Group I with 18 points, six more than second-placed Italy, who beat Estonia 3-1 in Tallinn to stay on track for qualification.

The comfortable win in Oslo leaves Norway firmly in control of the group as they seek a place at next year’s finals in the United States, Canada and Mexico.

After a meek performance, Israel take on Italy in Udine on Tuesday, knowing they must win to keep alive their fading hopes of qualifying.

A pro-Palestinian protester stands opposite the police outside Ullevaal Stadium during the match [Javad Parsa/NTB via Reuters]

Haaland’s hat-trick sets the tone

Haaland became the fastest player in men’s international football to reach 50 goals for his country and now boasts 51 goals for Norway in just 46 games.

His early penalty was saved by Israel goalkeeper Daniel Peretz, but the referee ordered the spot-kick to be retaken for encroachment inside the area, only for Peretz to parry away Haaland’s second effort.

But Norway forged ahead in the 18th minute through an Anan Khalaili own goal, before Haaland raced clear to score. Norway got their third from an Idan Nachmias own goal.

Manchester City forward Haaland added his second with a powerful header before nodding in to complete his sixth hat-trick for his country with 18 minutes left.

Norway has not played at a major tournament since Euro 2000.

Italy, attempting to reach their first World Cup finals since 2014, moved a step closer thanks to goals from Moise Kean, Mateo Retegui and Pio Esposito in Tallinn.

The Italians move three points ahead of Israel in second place in Group I, which offers a playoff spot.

Italy’s meeting with Israel is expected to be a tense affair, surrounded by pro-Palestinian protests, and only 5,000 tickets have been sold.

Erling Haaland in action.
Erling Haaland, centre, scores a goal during the FIFA World Cup 2026 qualifier match between Norway and Israel at Ullevaal Stadium [Mateusz Slodkowski/Getty Images]

Is ‘humble’ Kane still England’s undervalued superstar?

Harry Kane has rewritten the history books and broken records with sustained brilliance for clubs and country over more than a decade.

The 32-year-old holds England’s all-time scoring record, with a remarkable 74 goals in 109 appearances, with power to add as Thomas Tuchel’s side move to the brink of qualification for next summer’s World Cup.

Kane is also Tottenham Hotspur’s greatest goalscorer, with 280 goals in 435 appearances before moving to Bayern Munich in an £86.4m deal in August 2023.

And Kane’s stunning consistency has continued since moving to Munich, scoring 103 goals in 106 appearances for Bayern – also ending his long wait for a trophy when winning the Bundesliga last season.

Kane reached his century of goals for Bayern with a double in a 4-0 win against Werder Bremen. He achieved the feat in 104 games, putting him ahead of Erling Haaland and Cristiano Ronaldo as the fastest player to reach 100 for a single club in Europe’s top five leagues – after they hit the landmark for Manchester City and Real Madrid in 105 games.

He has scored 19 goals in 12 games for England and Bayern this season – one every 52 minutes.

    • 5 days ago
    • 5 days ago
    • 1 October

Is Kane taken for granted?

Kane is England’s goalscoring talisman – but there are still those who question whether he could have done more, asking whether his international record has been aided by qualifiers against inferior opposition.

Former England striker Chris Sutton puts the argument to bed in a single sentence: “If Harry Kane announced his retirement from international football today, we would instantly view the England team and their chances at next year’s World Cup in a completely different light.”

He added: “Kane may not have too long left with England, but who is the replacement? Who is anywhere near his level? No-one. That tells you all you need to know. As an all-rounder and ruthless goalscorer, England haven’t had many better.

“People say about scoring goals in qualifiers but he’s not the fixtures secretary, is he? He can’t help who he plays against. He’s a goalscoring machine and has been all his career.

“When you are talking about all-time great England strikers, he has to be in that conversation. Just look at his numbers.”

Major tournaments have not always been kind to Kane, starting with Euro 2016 in France when he took more corners than he scored goals – seven versus none – thanks to a bizarre set-piece strategy from manager Roy Hodgson, summing up a shambolic campaign that ended in humiliation against Iceland in the last 16.

PA Media

He was England’s top scorer when they reached the final of the delayed Euro 2020 tournament with four goals in seven games, although the 2022 World Cup ended in disappointment as Kane missed a penalty in the 2-1 defeat by France in the quarter-final in Qatar.

Kane, by his own standards, had a disappointing Euro 2024, looking so jaded there was a clamour for England’s captain to be replaced by Aston Villa’s Ollie Watkins.

He was substituted in every one of England’s knockout matches, including after only 61 minutes of the final loss to Spain in Berlin – and yet still finished as the tournament’s joint top scorer with three goals from seven games.

Kane is England’s highest goalscorer in major tournaments, with 15 goals from 29 games. This total puts him fifth, when ranking combined European Championship and World Cup goals, behind Cristiano Ronaldo and Germany trio Miroslav Klose, Gerd Muller and Jurgen Klinsmann.

So has his stellar contribution been underappreciated?

Sutton says: “Anybody who has played either with or against him, raves about him.

“If people do not give him the credit he deserves, it may be because he’s been England’s main man for so long. People are sometimes there to chop you down.

“England players get judged on major tournaments and if they don’t win it the criticism comes, with the high-profile captain usually first in that firing line.

“You can have rivalries, tribalism and social media, and there will be people who put the boot in, but you won’t get anyone who has played the game to a reasonable level having any doubts about him. And I think most fair-minded supporters recognise what a player Harry Kane is.”

Sutton added: “He has never been blessed with great pace but the way his brain works is fantastic. He’s not just a phenomenal goalscorer. He has the ability to drop deep to influence games, showing wonderful awareness, weight of passing, vision.”

Former England defender Matthew Upson, who played against Kane and watches him regularly as a BBC Radio 5 Live pundit, says: “The phrase ‘you don’t know what you’ve got until it’s gone’ springs to mind with Harry.

“I also think what plays into that is Kane’s profile. For the scale of what he does, I think he keeps his profile quite low.

“He is quite understated in the way he operates, being the figure he is in world football.

As good as Haaland – or even better?

Manchester City’s Haaland is the benchmark for Premier League strikers, with Saturday’s hat-trick against Israel taking his tally to 21 goals from 12 games for Norway and his club this season.

When it comes to endurance and consistency, however, Kane is the gold standard.

In 11 full seasons for Spurs and Bayern, since 2014-15, Kane has never scored fewer than 24 goals in all competitions.

BBC Sport pundit Pat Nevin expresses the view that Kane matches Haaland as a goalscorer, then arguably exceeds him as the more complete player.

The former Scotland winger said: “Far be it from a Scotsman to tell English people what to think, but although much-loved I still think Harry is slightly underestimated. This guy is utterly and completely brilliant.”

And the Haaland comparison?

Nevin explained: “It is no denigration of Erling Haaland, who is one of the great players in world football. In England, they admire Harry and all the rest of it, but he also should be considered one of the greats in world football. Maybe he’s not seen as that in England, but he is.

“Harry’s numbers are fantastic. They are even better when you consider a lot of these numbers were achieved when he was playing with Spurs.

“Spurs were a good side but they weren’t Manchester City. It’s not a problem with Haaland, but I just don’t think Harry is put into that bracket often enough.”

City manager Pep Guardiola once infamously referred to Spurs as “the Harry Kane team”. He tried to sign the striker in 2021 but Tottenham chairman Daniel Levy refused to sell, Guardiola then signing Haaland a year later.

Nevin said: “I’ve always thought from an outsider’s perspective, if you put Harry in Manchester City’s team, with the chances they were creating, would he have scored the same amount of goals as Haaland? I would not be in the least bit surprised if he did.

“As a pure footballer, Harry can play more positions, he can move into those deeper positions. I’ve been fortunate enough to see Harry play quite a few times for Bayern Munich.

“When you are watching a game when Haaland is at his best, your eye is always drawn to him. It seems like there are 21 footballers out there and Haaland.

Harry Kane poses with the Bundesliga trophyPA Media

Germany in awe of ‘superstar with youngster’s mentality’

Kane received one of the ultimate accolades recently when German tabloid Bild publicly retracted criticism of Bayern’s decision to sign Kane.

Journalist Alfred Draxler wrote: “I was one of those who viewed the 100m euros transfer from Tottenham to Bayern Munich in 2023 rather critically.”

In a complete about-turn, Draxler said: “I don’t think Harry Kane is vacationing in a hotel where you have to reserve your lounger in the morning. If I ever meet him, I’d get up really early and put a towel on his lounger for him. I wouldn’t do that for any English person!”

Bayern had no such doubts, with footage on social media of Kane being greeted ecstatically on his arrival by Thomas Tuchel, the then Bayern coach who is now plotting England’s path to next summer’s World Cup.

German football writer Raphael Honigstein told BBC Sport: “Harry Kane’s overall game and attitude is such that the fans and those inside the dressing room are simply in awe of this guy.

“When Kane arrived, there was a sense he was the real deal. Maybe concerns were the fee, injury record and his age. There were a few reservations and trepidations but they didn’t last very long.”

He added: “The numbers are one thing, but if it was just the numbers the impact wouldn’t be as big. Robert Lewandowski had the numbers, he broke Gerd Muller’s record, but Kane, unlike a typical centre-forward, plays with a sense of humility and with responsibility for the collective.

“He plays like a superstar but with the mentality of a youngster who has got everything to prove. Someone who isn’t beyond doing the extra yards and helping out, often in his own box. Just an amazing impact.”

Upson agrees Kane is a low-key superstar, saying: “It’s rare in this day and age for a player to be a superstar, like he is, but not to portray himself as one. It’s not the model of what he is.

Related topics

  • Insight: In-depth stories from the world of sport
  • Bayern Munich
  • Football
  • England Men’s Football Team