Type Here to Get Search Results !

After Meghan and Harry's shock interview, Elizabeth II pledges to deal with racism accusations

 After Meghan and Harry's shock interview, Elizabeth II pledges to deal with racism accusations

After Meghan and Harry's shock interview, Elizabeth II pledges to deal with racism accusations

Queen Elizabeth II on Tuesday assured Prince Harry and his wife Meghan of her affection, and promised to treat "in private" the accusations of racism launched by the couple, ensuring to take them "very seriously".


The Duke and Duchess of Sussex's explosive confessions to Oprah Winfrey, broadcast on Sunday, plunged the monarchy into a new crisis reminiscent of the days of Lady Diana, Harry's mother, in the 1990s, who revealed in public her marital setbacks then who had died in a car accident, chased by the paparazzi in Paris.


Under pressure to come out of its silence, Buckingham Palace issued a statement on behalf of the Queen, a rare occurrence due to the earthquake shaking the royal family, accused of having been unresponsive to Meghan's suicidal thoughts and, to through an unnamed member, for wondering about the skin color of their future child.


"The whole family is saddened to learn how difficult the past few years have been for Harry and Meghan," the very short text reads, stressing that the couple and their son, Archie, "will always be much loved family members. ".


Established for a year in California, the former Métis American actress Meghan Markle, 39, and Prince Harry, 36 and sixth in the order of succession from the crown, have questioned untenable media pressure, racism British media and the royal family's misunderstanding of their situation to explain their withdrawal from the monarchy.


They painted a grim picture of the "firm" which, according to Meghan, at times moved to tears, refused the help she asked for when she was plagued by suicidal thoughts.


Above all, causing much ink to flow in the UK, they reported on conversations within the royal family about what skin color their son Archie, now 22 months old, would have had before he was born.


On the identity of the person who asked this question, the couple made it clear that it was neither Queen Elizabeth II, 94, nor her husband, Prince Philip, 99, currently hospitalized .


Some in the government fear that these accusations will permanently undermine the aura of the monarchy, in a country recently brought to question its colonial past in the wake of the Black Lives Matter movement, and question in the wake the organization of the Commonwealth, dear to the Queen.



Young people support the couple

The British are divided over the couple, which sections of the press criticize for weakening the monarchy out of self-interest. The same proportion (32%) found they were treated fairly or unfairly by the royal family, according to a YouGov Institute survey.


But 61% of 18-24 year olds feel they have not been treated fairly.

After Meghan and Harry's shock interview, Elizabeth II pledges to deal with racism accusations


Prime Minister Boris Johnson refused to be drawn into the debate, merely expressing his "greatest admiration" for Elizabeth II. But considered close to Mr Johnson, Secretary of State for the Pacific Zac Goldsmith tweeted that "Harry is blasting his family."


Seen by 17 million Americans then 11 million viewers in the United Kingdom, the couple's interview echoes that granted by Princess Diana in 1995, where she had stunned by lifting the veil on her life within the monarchy .


"The fallout [of the interview] will be felt across generations, like Diana's," Diana's biographer Andrew Morton warned on ITV.

Post a Comment

0 Comments
* Please Don't Spam Here. All the Comments are Reviewed by Admin.