Prince Harry claims that he wants to make amends with the royal family

Prince Harry, the Duke of Sussex, has stated that he wants to make amends with the royal family.

In an emotional interview, the Duke of Sussex told the BBC that he “would love a reconciliation” with the Royal Family and expressed his disappointment at losing a judicial case about his security in the UK.

Prince Harry stated that he did not want to fight any more and did not “know how much longer my father has,” but the King “won’t speak to me because of this security stuff.”

After losing an appeal on the security levels he and his family are entitled to when in the UK, the prince spoke to BBC News in California.

“All of these issues have been examined repeatedly and meticulously by the courts, with the same conclusion reached on each occasion,” According to a statement from Buckingham Palace.

“I can’t see a world in which I would bring my wife and children back to the UK at this point,” the prince remarked following Friday’s court decision.

He continued by saying, “There have been a lot of arguments between myself and some of my family,” but said he had now “forgiven” them.

“I would adore getting back together with my family. Prince Harry stated that the conflict over his security had “always been the sticking point” and that there was no use in fighting any longer because life was valuable.

When the prince left his position as a working royal and relocated to the US in 2020, he sought to reverse security changes that had been implemented.

He claimed to feel “let down,” called his court loss a “good old fashioned establishment stitch up,” and put the blame for lowering his security on the Royal Household.

Prince Harry responded, “I never asked him to intervene – I asked him to step out of the way and let the experts do their jobs,” when asked if he had urged the King to step in and resolve the security problem.

The prince claimed that his treatment while his security was being decided had “uncovered my worst fears.”

Regarding the decision, he stated: “I’m devastated—not so much by the loss as I am by the people who made the decision and felt that this was acceptable.” Is it their victory?

He added: “I’m sure there are some people out there [who] consider this a huge win, probably the ones who wish me harm.”

The removal of his automatic security entitlement, according to Prince Harry, affects him “every single day” and has put him in a situation where he can only safely come to the UK if the Royal Family extends an invitation to him, as he would receive enough security in such cases.

The prince said that his wife and, subsequently, his kids had also been affected by the changes to his security status in 2020.

Everyone knew that they were placing us in danger in 2020, and they thought that my awareness of that risk would compel us to return, he said.

“But do you not want to keep us secure when you realize that didn’t work?

“Despite all of our differences, do you not want to just make sure we’re safe, whether you’re my dad, the Royal Household, the government, or my family?”

“I love my country, I always have done, despite what some people in that country have done,” he continued when asked if he missed the UK. and I believe it’s quite unfortunate that I won’t be able to show my kids my native country.

Prince Harry declared that Friday’s decision had “proven that there was no way to win this through the courts” and that he would not be pursuing any other legal challenges.

He said that the decision had been a “surprise” and remarked, “I wish someone had told me that beforehand.”

“This is a family dispute at its core, and it saddens me greatly that we are sitting here five years later, where a decision was made that probably, in fact, I know, kept us under the roof,” he added.

Shortly after losing his most recent legal battle against the UK government over the degree of security he and his family are entitled to while visiting, Prince Harry talked to the BBC.

The prince’s argument, which focused on how an official committee decided to deny him automatic, full-scale protection similar to that enjoyed by other senior royals, was denied by the Court of Appeal.

Prince Harry’s “sense of grievance” did not “translate into a legal argument,” the court declared on Friday, despite the fact that he had made “powerful” arguments regarding the degree of threat he and his family face.

His legal case focused on the Protection of Royalty and Public Figures (Ravec) committee, which was chaired at the time by Sir Richard Mottram and authorized security for senior royals on behalf of the Home Office.

Prince Harry contended that his case ought to have been presented to Ravec’s Risk Management Board (RMB) in accordance with the committee’s rules, which would have evaluated the risks to his and his family’s safety, but that did not occur.

Senior justices stated on Friday that although the committee had deviated from protocol in its 2020 decision about the prince’s security, they had determined that it had been “sensible” to do so because to the complexities of his situation.

When Prince Harry learned that a member of the Royal Household was on the Ravec committee, he said his “jaw hit the floor.” He also asserted that Friday’s decision demonstrated that the Royal Household had a greater influence on the committee’s decision-making process than did the law.

He asserted that his position as the most at-risk royal was “overnight” demoted to the least at-risk due to “interference” by the Royal Household in the 2020 decision.

“There is reason to wonder how that is even possible and what the motivation was at the time,” he continued.

Prince Harry urged Home Secretary Yvette Cooper and UK Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer to step in and resolve his security matter, as well as to restructure the Ravec committee.

The prince said he will write to Cooper to “ask her to urgently examine the matter and review the Ravec process” in a statement made public later Friday.

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