The royal opened up about her feelings about Harry’s circumstances on a podcast, as he continued to go through personal struggles and remain estranged from his father King Charles
Princess Delphine said she feels sorry for Harry(Image: Isopix/REX/Shutterstock)
A royal has revealed she “feels sorry” for Prince Harry amid the backlash he’Ss been facing.
The Duke of Sussex remains locked in a fierce feud with his father, King Charles and brother Prince William following a string of allegations he made against them in his Netflix series and tell-all book, Spare.
Speculation about a potential reconciliation between Harry and his father, the King, has emerged after top advisors for both men were seen gathering at an exclusive private club in London. It is claimed the confidential discussions took place at a private members’ club just minutes from Clarence House.
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But it was Princess Delphine of Belgium who opened up about Harry’s circumstances on a podcast, declaring she “gets” the Duke’s struggles and insisting that “everyone is bullying him”.
There are rumors Harry and his father may have a reconciliation (Image: POOL/AFP via Getty Images)
The princess has also faced her own family drama as she is the out-of-wedlock child of Belgium’s ex-king, King Albert II. DNA testing confirmed her parentage. And she subsequently secured a ground-breaking court decision to receive the title of princess and be addressed as “Her Royal Highness”.
Speaking on the It’s Reigning Men podcast, she revealed, “I do follow a little bit of Harry because Lady Diana was just part of my life when I was in England… Then she had these children and everything, and then this death was just horrible.”
She said, “I feel very sorry for Harry because I think that was traumatic for him. I think Harry suffered so much, and I think he was traumatized and it’s coming out now,” reports the Mirror.
Addressing his ongoing security dispute, she continued, “This thing about security. I think it’s to do with what happened to his mother. “I understand the guy. He’s just traumatised. And I understand, so he’s doing these things, and everybody’s bullying him, but not thinking about his trauma. And I just find it terrible because he’s just been kind of left.”
The European royals’ remarks on Harry emerge as he follows in the footsteps of his mother, Princess Diana, with a poignant journey to Angola. Harry revisited an Angolan minefield 28 years after his mother’s iconic trip to the same nation.
Harry has come under fire for criticizing his family in his tell-all book Spare(Image: Getty Images)
Serving as a patron for the landmine clearance organization the Halo Trust, Harry engaged with families in a secluded village near Africa’s biggest minefield yesterday. He imparted wisdom to the children of Cuito Cuanavale on how to steer clear of mines, instructing them in Portuguese: “Stop, go back and tell your elders.”
The duke was shedding light on the ongoing danger of explosives in Angola, echoing the efforts of Diana, Princess of Wales, who in 1997 campaigned for a global ban on such weapons in the very same country. On Tuesday, he had an audience with Angola’s President Joao Lourenco and praised the president’s commitment to persist in supporting the eradication of landmines, remnants of a civil war that concluded in 2002.
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Diana, mere months before her tragic death in a car accident, famously navigated a minefield clad in a protective visor and vest, courtesy of the Halo Trust.
She confidently walked down a safe lane in a Huambo minefield, and the photographs of her donned in body armor and a face shield propelled the anti-landmine movement into the international spotlight. Harry, mirroring his mother Diana’s sentiments during a 2019 trip to an Angolan minefield, expressed: “Children should never have to live in fear of playing outside or walking to school. Here in Angola, over three decades later, the remnants of war still threaten lives every day.”
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