Belfast Telegraph

Duchess seeks to block naming of five friends in court battle with publisher

- BY TONY JONES

THE Duchess of Sussex has applied to the High Court to stop the publisher of the Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday from naming her five friends who spoke anonymousl­y to a US magazine to defend her from tabloid “bullying”.

Meghan is suing Associated Newspapers, publisher of the two titles and Mailonline, over articles which featured parts of a “private and confidenti­al” letter from the duchess to her estranged father, Thomas Markle. The duchess has claimed that identifyin­g her friends, who were interviewe­d but not named by People magazine, would be for “no reason other than clickbait and commercial gain” and would endanger their “mental wellbeing”.

The Mail on Sunday said the paper had “no intention” of identifyin­g the friends in its next edition but the question of their anonymity should be considered by the court.

In the article, published in February last year, they spoke out against the bullying the duchess said she has faced, and have only been identified in confidenti­al court documents.

In a witness statement submitted as part of the applicatio­n, Meghan said: “Associated Newspapers, the owner of the Daily Mail and the Mail on Sunday, is threatenin­g to publish the names of five women — five private citizens — who made a choice on their own to speak anonymousl­y with a US media outlet more than a year ago, to defend me from the bullying behaviour of Britain’s tabloid media.

“These five women are not on trial, and nor am I. The publisher of the Mail on Sunday is the one on trial. It is this publisher that acted unlawfully and is attempting to evade accountabi­lity; to create a circus and distract from the point of this case — that the Mail on Sunday unlawfully published my private letter.

“Each of these women is a private citizen, young mother, and each has a basic right to privacy.

“Both the Mail on Sunday and the court system have their names on a confidenti­al schedule, but for the Mail on Sunday to expose them in the public domain for no reason other than clickbait and commercial gain is vicious and poses a threat to their emotional and mental wellbeing.

“The Mail on Sunday is playing a media game with real lives.”

Meghan went on to say in her witness statement: “I respectful­ly ask the court to treat this legal matter with the sensitivit­y it deserves, and to prevent the publisher of the Mail on Sunday from breaking precedent and abusing the legal process by identifyin­g these anonymous individual­s — a privilege that these newspapers in fact rely upon to protect their own unnamed sources.”

A Mail on Sunday spokesman said: “To set the record straight, the Mail on Sunday had absolutely no intention of publishing the identities of the five friends this weekend. But their evidence is at the heart of the case and we see no reason why their identities should be kept secret.

“That is why we told the duchess’s lawyers last week that the question of their confidenti­ality should be properly considered by the court.”

Meghan is suing Associated Newspapers over five articles — two in the Mail on Sunday and three on Mailonline — which were published in February 2019 and reproduced parts of a handwritte­n letter she sent to Mr Markle (75) in August 2018.

Lawyers acting for Associated Newspapers have argued that her five friends — identified only as A-E in court documents — brought the letter into the public domain when it was referred to for the first time in their US magazine interview.

 ??  ?? The Duchess of Sussex and (right) with her father Thomas
The Duchess of Sussex and (right) with her father Thomas
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