Prince Harry tells BBC he wants 'reconciliation' with Royal Family

Nada Tawfik and Sean Coughlan
BBC News
Watch: Prince Harry says he can't see a world where his wife and children will visit the UK and asks for reconciliation with his family

The Duke of Sussex has told the BBC he "would love a reconciliation" with the Royal Family, in an emotional interview in which he said he was "devastated" at losing a legal challenge over his security in the UK.

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

The prince spoke to BBC News in California after losing an appeal over the levels of security he and his family are entitled to while in the UK.

Buckingham Palace said: "All of these issues have been examined repeatedly and meticulously by the courts, with the same conclusion reached on each occasion."

After Friday's court ruling, the prince said: "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," he added, but had now "forgiven" them.

"I would love reconciliation with my family. There's no point continuing to fight any more, life is precious," said Prince Harry, who said the dispute over his security had "always been the sticking point".

The prince had wanted to overturn changes to his security that were introduced in 2020 as he stepped down as a working royal and moved to the United States.

Saying that he felt "let down", he described his court defeat as a "good old fashioned establishment stitch up" and blamed the Royal Household for influencing the decision to reduce his security.

Asked whether he had asked the King to intervene in the dispute over security, Prince Harry said: "I never asked him to intervene - I asked him to step out of the way and let the experts do their jobs."

The prince said his treatment during the process of deciding his security had "uncovered my worst fears".

He said of the decision: "I'm devastated - not so much as devastated with the loss that I am about the people behind the decision, feeling as though this is okay. Is it a win for them?"

He continued: "I'm sure there are some people out there, probably most likely the people that wish me harm, [who] consider this a huge win."

Prince Harry said the decision to remove his automatic security entitlement impacts him "every single day", and has left him in a position where he can only safely return to the UK if invited by the Royal Family - as he would get sufficient security in those circumstances.

Getty Images The Duke and Duchess of Sussex walk out of a door. The duchess is waving and smiling. Prince Harry is wearing a white shirt and a black blazer and trousers. Meghan is wearing a white shirt and a beige blazer and trousers. Prince Harry has ginger hair, a ginger beard, and blue eyes. Meghan has long brown hair and brown eyes.Getty Images
The Duke and Duchess of Sussex, pictured in April, have been living in the US since 2020

The prince said changes to his security status had impacted not just him, but his wife and, later, his children too.

He went on to say: "Everybody knew that they were putting us at risk in 2020 and they hoped that me knowing that risk would force us to come back.

"But then when you realise that didn't work, do you not want to keep us safe?

"Whether you're the government, the Royal Household, whether you're my dad, my family - despite all of our differences, do you not want to just ensure our safety?"

Asked whether he missed the UK, he replied: "I love my country, I always have done, despite what some people in that country have done... and I think that it's really quite sad that I won't be able to show my children my homeland."

Prince Harry said he would not be seeking a further legal challenge as Friday's ruling had "proven that there was no way to win this through the courts".

"I wish someone had told me that beforehand," he said, adding that the ruling had been a "surprise".

He continued: "This, at the heart of it, is a family dispute, and it makes me really, really sad that we're sitting here today, five years later, where a decision that was made most likely, in fact I know, to keep us under the roof."

Friday's ruling was the result of Prince Harry's latest legal challenge against the UK government over the level of security he and his family are entitled to when visiting.

The Court of Appeal said that while Prince Harry had made "powerful" arguments about the level of threat he and his family face, his "sense of grievance" did not "translate into a legal argument".

His legal complaint centred around the Protection of Royalty and Public Figures (Ravec) committee - which authorises security for senior royals on behalf of the Home Office - and its decision to remove his eligibility for the automatic, full-scale protection other senior royals receive.

Under the committee's regulations, Prince Harry argued, his case should have been put before Ravec's Risk Management Board (RMB), which would have assessed the threats to his and family's security - but that did not happen.

On Friday, senior judges said the committee had diverged from policy when making its 2020 decision over the prince's security, but concluded it had been "sensible" to do so because of the complexity of his circumstances.

Prince Harry sat opposite Nada Tawfik
Prince Harry spoke to BBC News in California following Friday's Court of Appeal ruling in the UK

Prince Harry said his "jaw hit the floor" when he found out a representative of the Royal Household sat on the Ravec committee, and claimed Friday's ruling had proved its decision-making process was more influenced by the Royal Household than by legal constraints.

He claimed there had been "interference" by the Royal Household in the 2020 decision, which he said resulted in his status as the most at-risk royal being downgraded to the least at risk "overnight".

"So one does question how that is even possible and also the motive behind that at the time," he added.

Prince Harry called on UK Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer and Home Secretary Yvette Cooper to intervene in his security case, and to overhaul how the Ravec committee operates.

In a statement released later on Friday, the prince said he would write to Cooper to "ask her to urgently examine the matter and review the Ravec process".

A spokesperson for the Home Office said the department was "pleased" that the judgement had been in the government's favour.

They added: "The UK government's protective security system is rigorous and proportionate.

"It is our long-standing policy not to provide detailed information on those arrangements, as doing so could compromise their integrity and affect individuals' security."

Additional reporting by Sean Seddon

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