Prince Harry doesnโt have his own home in the UK anymore so he has to do what he can to protect his privacy when visiting, says a royal expert.
The Duke of Sussex detailed the extreme lengths he went to meet up with Meghan Markle in their early days of dating without being detected in his book Spare.ย
And now royal author and expert Tom Quinn has also shed light on Harryโs struggles with security issues when he returns to the UK for visits.
In an exclusive chat with The Mirror, Tom said: โHarry is completely obsessed with the idea that any visit to the UK is fraught with security difficulties.
Hence his continued legal action to challenge the UK governmentโs decision not to fund his security.โ
Speaking of Harryโs penchant for disguises and going incognito to avoid being hounded.
Quinn shared his thoughts on the Dukeโs preferences regarding accommodation when he travels to the UK.
Quinn said: โHarry hates the idea of hotels โ last time he stayed in a hotel on a visit to the UK he had to leave and arrive virtually in disguise. The problems are even bigger if he plans to stay with friends as heโs convinced, he is always being watched by the media and that they will find out where heโs staying.โ
Just earlier this year Prince Harry suffered a huge blow in terms of security when he comes to the UK. Recently, the duke has been locked in a legal battle against the Home Office over the February 2020 decision of the Executive Committee for the Protection of Royalty and Public Figures (Ravec) that he should receive a different degree of taxpayer-funded protection when in the country. Ravecโs decision came as a result of a change in Harryโs โstatusโ after he stopped being a โfull-time working member of the Royal Family โ, a judge was told.
Harryโs lawyers had previously told the court that he was โsingled outโ and treated โless favourablyโ in the decision to change the level of his taxpayer-funded personal security. They said a failure to carry out a risk analysis and fully consider the impact of a โsuccessful attackโ on him meant the approach to his protection was โunlawful and unfairโ.
The court was told that Harry believes his children, Prince Archie and Princess Lilibet cannot โfeel at homeโ in the UK if it is โnot possible to keep them safeโ there. At a previous hearing of the case, in a written statement, Harry said: โIt was with great sadness for both of us that my wife and I felt forced to step back from this role and leave the country in 2020. The UK is my home.
โThe UK is central to the heritage of my children and a place I want them to feel at home, as much as where they live at the moment in the United States. That cannot happen if itโs not possible to keep them safe when they are on UK soil. I cannot put my wife in danger like that and, given my experiences in life, I am reluctant to unnecessarily put myself in harmโs way too.โ
But earlier this year, retired High Court judge Sir Peter Lane rejected the dukeโs case and concluded Ravecโs approach was not irrational nor procedurally unfair. And in another blow this month, a judicial spokesperson said that Harry has lost his initial bid to appeal against the decision.
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Source: Tampa Bay Times