Prince Harry arrives in Canada to prepare for non-royal life
Send a link to a friend
[January 21, 2020]
(Reuters) - Britain's Prince Harry
has arrived in Canada to join his wife Meghan as the couple prepare for
a new life after agreeing to stop using their royal titles as part of a
deal to end a crisis in the Windsor family.
Harry was shown arriving on Vancouver Island by Sky News, just days
after reaching an arrangement with Queen Elizabeth and senior royals
that will see him and his wife Meghan leave behind their royal roles to
seek an independent future.
Buckingham Palace and the queen said on Saturday that Harry and Meghan
would no longer be working members of the royal family. They would not
use their "Royal Highness" titles and would pay their own way in life,
freeing them to forge a new future in Canada and the United States.
Harry has admitted he had not wanted to step away entirely from his
royal life and his military appointments, but said there was no other
option.
"It brings me great sadness that it has come to this,” he said on
Sunday.
American actress Meghan returned to Canada on Jan. 10 to be reunited
with baby son Archie, and Harry flew out late on Monday to join her.
The Duke and Duchess of Sussex, the couple's formal title which they
will continue to use, spent six weeks in Canada at the end of last year
before returning to Britain.
Earlier this month, they shocked the royal family by publicly announcing
they wanted more independence, leaving the other senior members hurt and
disappointed, according to royal sources.
The new arrangement, agreed following a summit held by the queen at her
Sandringham estate and attended by Harry's father and heir-to-the-throne
Prince Charles and elder brother Prince William, will come into effect
this Spring.
[to top of second column]
|
Britain's Prince Harry meets Saad Eddine el-Othmani, Prime Minister
of Morocco during the UK-Africa Investment Summit in London, Britain
January 20, 2020. Stefan Rousseau/Pool via REUTERS
Harry is expected to carry out some official engagements before then
although it is not clear whether Meghan will be involved. She was
pictured in the Sun newspaper on Tuesday, walking her dogs in a park
on Vancouver Island close to where the couple have been staying in a
secluded house.
In their new life, the couple will no longer receive public money
and will repay the cost of refurbishing their British home in
Windsor, which official figures show amounted to 2.4 million pounds
($3 million).
But certain details, such as whether the couple could continue to
use the “Sussex Royal” title for their website and branding and
their future security arrangements, have either not been finalised
or publicly revealed.
Asked about who would pay for their protection, justice minister
Robert Buckland said there was an issue about how public money was
spent.
"Quite clearly there have already been arrangements made about how
that family are going to live and how they are going to be able to
get private income but there clearly has to be a line of
delineation," he told Sky News.
"I think we all want a family like that to be safe, but at the same
time I think what really needs to happen is they need to understand
how their lifestyle is to adapt and what their needs might be."
(Reporting by Mekhla Raina and Rama Venkat in Bengaluru and Michael
Holden in London; Editing by Guy Faulconbridge and Giles Elgood)
[© 2020 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2020 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|