Harry's shocking interview is a 'sad and sorry saga': Prince leaves Royals reeling after saying father 'won't speak to him' and he 'doesn't know how much longer he has left'

Prince Harry expressed his dismay over the handling of his security status, following his court battle defeat to restore police protection in the UK. The royal mentioned uncovering shocking truths and criticized those accountable for the downgrade.

While residing in California, Prince Harry contested the decision made by the Executive Committee for the Protection of Royalty and Public Figures (Ravec), which led to a change in his security level. His High Court claim against the Home Office was dismissed.

But Sir Geoffrey Vos, Master of the Rolls, rejected that argument and backed the original decision made by Ravec.

During an interview with the BBC, Prince Harry made pointed remarks seemingly directed at his father, King Charles III, revealing his surprise at learning about the involvement of the Royal Household in the secretive committee overseeing security matters.

He insinuated that more could have been done by the monarch, as well as the King’s private secretary Sir Clive Alderton, who had a position on Ravec.  

Harry told the BBC: ‘There is a lot of control and ability in my father’s hands.

‘Ultimately this whole thing could be resolved through him.’ 

He bolstered that claim just hours later by issuing a statement again taking aim at Ravec’s decision, which he described as ‘a reckless action’ that ‘knowingly put me and my family in harm’s way.’

Prince Harry said he had 'uncovered shocking truths' as he took a blistering swipe against those responsible for downgrading his security status

Prince Harry said he had ‘uncovered shocking truths’ as he took a blistering swipe against those responsible for downgrading his security status 

He insinuated that more could have been done by his father, King Charles III, as well as the King¿s private secretary Sir Clive Alderton, who had a position on the Executive Committee for the Protection of Royalty and Public Figures (Ravec)

He insinuated that more could have been done by his father, King Charles III, as well as the King’s private secretary Sir Clive Alderton, who had a position on the Executive Committee for the Protection of Royalty and Public Figures (Ravec)

Prince Harry went on to detail that he, Meghan and their children had been 'subjected' to threats made by neo-Nazis and extremist groups, including Al-Qaeda

Prince Harry went on to detail that he, Meghan and their children had been ‘subjected’ to threats made by neo-Nazis and extremist groups, including Al-Qaeda

Harry continued: ‘This legal action has been a last resort, but one that has uncovered shocking truths, starting with the fact that the Royal Household are key decision-makers on RAVEC and my sole representation for matters regarding my safety.

‘In this process I’ve also learned the names of all those involved, many of whom retired immediately after playing their part.’

He added: ‘To this present day, the Royal Household remain my sole representation on RAVEC for evert visit and could call for this assessment to be done at any point.

‘The only possible conclusion that can be drawn is they choose not to, because they know the outcome would prove that my security should never have been removed in the first place.’

Harry went on to detail that he and his family had been ‘subjected’ to threats made by neo-Nazis and extremist groups, including Al-Qaeda. 

The Duke of Sussex said he would be writing to Home Secretary Yvette Cooper asking her to ‘urgently examine the matter and review the Ravec process’.

Harry believes he has been ‘singled out’ and ‘badly treated’ for ‘unjustified, inferior treatment’ since Megxit five years ago.

His barrister had argued that the removal of Met Police armed bodyguards when he is in the UK has left the royal’s life ‘at stake’.

Harry believes he has been 'singled out' and 'badly treated' for 'unjustified, inferior treatment' since Megxit five years ago

Harry believes he has been ‘singled out’ and ‘badly treated’ for ‘unjustified, inferior treatment’ since Megxit five years ago 

Harry's statement in full that he issued last night following the loss of his court appeal

Harry’s statement in full that he issued last night following the loss of his court appeal 

But Sir Geoffrey Vos, the Master of the Rolls, told the duke his ‘grievance’ over downgraded security had not ‘translated into a legal argument’ and ultimately he was unsuccessful.

He ruled the original security decision had been a ‘predictable’ and even ‘sensible’ reaction to Megxit – when Harry and Meghan stepped back from being senior royals and left Britain.

And a Buckingham Palace source said that the intervention of the monarch into Harry’s security arrangements would have been ‘improper’.  

Harry’s most incendiary quotes

‘He [my father] won’t speak to me because of this security stuff’

‘Some members of my family may never forgive me for writing a book’

‘I don’t know how long he [my father] has left’

‘I can’t see a world in which I would bring my wife and children back to the UK at this point’

‘There have been so many disagreements between myself and some of my family’

A spokesperson said: ‘These issues have been examined meticulously by the courts, with the same conclusion on each occasion.’

A source added: ‘It would have been constitutionally improper for His Majesty to intervene while this matter was being considered by the Government and reviewed by the Courts.’

Harry’s statement on Ravec followed a bombshell interview where he dished out the details of his strained relationship with his father, which a royal expert described as a ‘sad and sorry saga’.

The Duke of Sussex last night launched a blistering attack on King Charles, saying he ‘won’t speak to me’ and that he ‘doesn’t know how much longer he has left’.

He also revealed he will not bring his wife or children back to the UK – and said he had had ‘so many disagreements’ with his family, some of whom ‘may never forgive’ him for writing a book.

Reflecting on Harry’s BBC interview, royal expert Professor Kate Williams questioned whether the seemingly ‘angry and resentful’ duke could ever repair his relationship his father. 

‘This is a very significant moment in what will be written about by the historians of the future about Harry,’ she told Sky News. 

Former BBC royal correspondent Jennie Bond said the Duke was ‘bristling with anger’.

She said: ‘And resentment. And mistrust of the royal household. 

‘And despair over his father’s attitude, I suppose. It’s just such a sad and sorry saga. 

‘I had hoped eventually there might be some kind of reconciliation, but clearly, although Harry says he wants reconciliation, he doesn’t see he can do that now.’

During his interview with the BBC, Harry said the King ‘won’t speak to me’, and claimed to be the victim of an ‘Establishment stitch-up’.

The Duke of Sussex also accused the Royal Household of ‘interfering’ in his long-running battle in His Majesty’s courts to reinstate his police bodyguards.

The comments were part of a scathing interview he gave to the BBC after judges ruled against him yesterday.

Harry vowed he would never bring his children, Prince Archie and Princess Lilibet, to Britain, adding that family ties are now so strained he does not even know ‘how much longer my father has’ to live.

It comes as a royal insider claimed that while Harry may want to repair the relationship with his family, Charles is still frustrated and upset with his son. 

A friend of the King said it would have been ‘constitutionally improper’ for him to intervene in the court case.

They added: ‘What has frustrated and upset him on a more personal level is the Duke’s failure to respect this principle.

‘And for his supporters to suggest that somehow his father doesn’t care about his family, or should step in.’

Harry, 40, yesterday raged that ‘the other side’ in the court case had ‘won in keeping me unsafe’, as England’s second most senior judge slapped down his Appeal Court bid to reinstate his police bodyguards when in the UK.

The duke, who left Britain in 2020 for a life first in Canada and later in California, alleged the Royal Household exploited security ‘to imprison’ members of the Royal Family, blocking them ‘from being able to choose a different life’.

He said: ‘It’s really quite sad that I won’t be able to show my children my homeland.’

In the extraordinary interview, Harry added that he was ‘devastated’ after losing his battle over taxpayer-funded bodyguards – which puts him on the hook for £1.5million in legal costs. 

He laughed as he revealed ‘someone had told me beforehand’ there was ‘no way to win’.

Members of the Royal Family depart Westminster Abbey after attending the annual Commonwealth Service in London on March 9, 2020

Members of the Royal Family depart Westminster Abbey after attending the annual Commonwealth Service in London on March 9, 2020

Within hours of yesterday’s ruling at the Royal Courts of Justice in London, the duke launched a salvo of jaw-dropping barbs at the Royal Family, including saying: ‘It’s impossible to bring my family back to the UK’. 

‘I love my country and always have done. Despite what some people in that country have done,’ Harry added.

‘So I miss the UK. I miss parts of the UK. Of course I do. I think it’s really quite sad that I won’t be able to show my children my homeland.’

Last night Buckingham Palace rebuked Harry’s claims of an establishment stitch-up in a blunt statement. 

Laying bare his rift with the King and Prince William, following his interview with Oprah Winfrey which alleged racism and then the explosive publication of his stinging memoir, Spare, Harry said he had ‘forgiven them’.

‘There have been so many disagreements, differences between me and some of my family,’ he said. 

”Some will never forgive me for writing a book. But I would love reconciliation with my family.

‘I don’t know how much longer my father has. He won’t speak to me because of this security stuff. But it would be nice to reconcile.’ 

Sir Geoffrey Vos, Master of the Rolls, pictured today as he rejected Harry's appeal

Sir Geoffrey Vos, Master of the Rolls, pictured today as he rejected Harry’s appeal

The Duke of Sussex at the Royal Courts of Justice on April 8 during his appeal against a High Court ruling preventing him getting automatic taxpayer-funded police protection in the UK

The Duke of Sussex at the Royal Courts of Justice on April 8 during his appeal against a High Court ruling preventing him getting automatic taxpayer-funded police protection in the UK

The Duke of Sussex's appeal against the dismissal of his legal challenge over the level of protection he and his family (pictured together at Christmas) is about his family's right to security and safety, the court heard

The Duke of Sussex’s appeal against the dismissal of his legal challenge over the level of protection he and his family (pictured together at Christmas) is about his family’s right to security and safety, the court heard

But Harry paired his plea with an accusation that risks a constitutional debate: ‘What I know is interference came from the royal household.’

During the interview in California with the BBC’s Nada Tawfik, Harry claimed only he and the late Queen were on a par in terms of their security risk ‘scores’, as assessed by a Home Office quango. 

He added: ‘I’ve been treated differently to everybody else that exists, I have been singled out.’

And in what was interpreted as a reference to Princess Diana, who died in a car crash, Harry said: ‘I don’t want history to repeat itself. Through the [court] process, I have discovered that some people want history to repeat itself.’

Yesterday’s ruling is a bitter blow to the duke, who said that, of all his court battles, this one ‘mattered the most’. 

He will now be expected to foot the legal bill for taxpayers and his lawyers. The decision to downgrade the security was made by the Home Office’s Executive Committee for the Protection of Royalty and Public Figures (Ravec).  

Harry said his ‘jaw dropped’ when he discovered the Royal Household – he named the King’s private secretary Sir Clive Alderton – sat on the Ravec committee. He said: ‘There is a lot of control and ability in my father’s hands.

‘Ultimately this whole thing could be resolved through him.’ 

Harry last saw the King in February last year, shortly after Charles, 76, was diagnosed with cancer. 

In a statement last night, Harry said he would be writing to Home Secretary Yvette Cooper asking her to ‘urgently examine the matter and review the Ravec process’.

Harry believes he has been ‘singled out’ and ‘badly treated’ for ‘unjustified, inferior treatment’ since Megxit five years ago.

His barrister argued that the removal of Met Police armed bodyguards when he is in the UK has left the royal’s life ‘at stake’.

The California-based royal had fought the dismissal of his High Court claim against the Home Office over the decision of the Executive Committee for the Protection of Royalty and Public Figures (Ravec) that he should receive a different degree of protection when in the country.

But Sir Geoffrey Vos, Master of the Rolls said in his ruling this afternoon in London that Ravec’s decision ‘were taken as an understandable, and perhaps predictable, reaction to the claimant having stepped back from royal duties and having left the UK to live principally overseas’.

‘These were powerful and moving arguments and that it was plain the Duke of Sussex felt badly treated by the system’, he said.

‘But I concluded, having studied the detail, I could not say that the Duke’s sense of grievance translated into a legal argument to challenge RAVEC’s decision’.

Sir Geoffrey said Harry ‘makes the mistake of confusing superficial analogies’ when comparing himself with other VIPs which had ‘added nothing’ to the legal question.

He added: ‘My conclusion was that the Duke of Sussex’s appeal would be dismissed’.

It means that for now, armed police bodyguards, paid for by the British taxpayer, will not be automatically reinstated for him, Meghan, Archie and Lilibet when they are in the UK. 

It raises more questions over whether the Sussexes will visit Britain again.

In a statement last night, Harry said he would be writing to Home Secretary Yvette Cooper asking her to ‘urgently examine the matter and review the Ravec process’.

‘The conditions of my security were not based on threat, risk and impact, they were made based on my role – one that my wife and I wanted to maintain but was ultimately refused,’ he said.

He added: ‘This all comes from the same institutions that preyed upon my mother, that openly campaigned for the removal of our security, and continue to incite hatred towards me, my wife and even our children.’

When asked whether Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer should ‘step in’, Harry told the BBC: ‘I think that based on the judgment that the court has put out today, it clearly states that Ravec are not constrained by law.

‘Again, I wish somebody had said that from the beginning.’

He continued: ‘Yes, I would ask the Prime Minister to step in.

You May Also Like

Alleged Predator Uses Rideshare Service to Meet Underage Girl from Online Encounter: Authorities

An alleged adult predator persuaded a young teen girl over Snapchat to…

“Beyonce’s Cowboy Carter Tour: A Shocking Experience Leading Me to Request a Refund of $700”

I’m the first to admit that I’m not the biggest Beyonce fan,…

Authorities in French village search woodland for clues in ‘frenzied’ murder case of 69-year-old British mother, leaving three questions unanswered.

SEVERAL unanswered questions still remain over Brit mum Karen Carter’s brutal murder…

“Donald Trump Shares Unusual AI Image as Pope After Joking About Being Considered for the Position”

DONALD Trump posted a bizarre AI picture of him as the Pope…

Couple from New Mexico Accused of Abusing Children and Others, Including Living in Mud Caves on Landfill-like Property

A New Mexico mother was arraigned this week on 18 charges related…

First Execution of Hamas Terrorists in Six Decades in Israel

EVIL Hamas terrorists who slaughtered, raped and tortured innocent civilians on October…

Person Who Kidnapped Elizabeth Smart and Committed Sexual Offenses Caught for Breaking Parole Terms

One of Elizabeth Smart’s abductors has been arrested for violating the conditions…

Prince Harry’s stunning interview highlighting his father, the royal family, and a security dispute in its entirety

During a recent emotional interview with the BBC, Prince Harry candidly discussed…

Study shows that consuming well-known fruit can improve sexual performance and increase libido

Eating a popular fruit may help boost men’s sex lives according to…

Shocking News: Roommate Finds Xana Dead on Floor, Sees Intruder in Mask, Motive Uncovered

New Kohberger evidence reveals what Idaho roommates saw the night of the…

How to Generate Support for Strikes: Doctors’ Union Suggests Organizing Pizza Nights

MILITANT junior doctors have secretly admitted some members are reluctant to go…

Eva Longoria stuns in a low-cut blue satin dress at David Beckham’s luxurious 50th birthday celebration in London, joined by husband José Bastón, the Ramsays, and special guest Tom Cruise from Hollywood.

Eva Longoria and her spouse José Bastón appeared elegant as they were…