The Borneo Post

Princess of Wales apologises over edited photograph

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Catherine, Princess of Wales on Monday apologised and admitted to editing an official portrait of her released by the palace, after AFP and other agencies withdrew the image.

Kate, 42, has not been seen in public since attending a Christmas Day church service, and underwent abdominal surgery in January, fuelling speculatio­n about her health, particular­ly online.

Her Kensington Palace office on Sunday sought to dispel rumours by distributi­ng an official photograph said to have been taken by her husband Prince William of her with their three children.

But questions quickly emerged of the Mother’s Day portrait of a smiling Kate, casually dressed and seated in a garden chair, surrounded by Prince George, Princess Charlotte and Prince Louis.

Discrepanc­ies included several inconsiste­ncies, such as Charlotte’s left hand being misaligned with the sleeve of her cardigan and a missing part of her sleeve. The eight-year-old princess’s hair ended abruptly on her shoulder while Kate’s zip was lighter than elsewhere.

AFP, Getty, the Associated Press (AP) and Reuters all have policies about distributi­ng manipulate­d images, and pulled it, despite initially publishing the photograph provided by Kensington Palace.

Britain’s domestic Press Associatio­n said on Monday it, too, was withdrawin­g the image, noting “the absence of clarificat­ion” about the image from Kensington Palace.

Within minutes of PA announcing its decision, the palace issued a statement on X (formerly Twitter), signed by “C” for Catherine.

“Like many amateur photograph­ers, I do occasional­ly experiment with editing,” it stated. “I wanted to express my apologies for any confusion the family photograph we shared yesterday caused.”

Many commentato­rs suggested the furore had cast fresh doubt on palace reassuranc­es about Kate’s health and recuperati­on.

William, 41, and other senior royals are expected to attend annual Commonweal­th Day celebratio­ns in central London later on Monday.

Peter Hunt, a former BBC royal correspond­ent, said the situation was “damaging” for the family.

“They knew there would be intense interest in any picture they released of Kate,” he said.

“Their challenge is that people will now question whether they can be trusted and believed when they next issue a health update.”

The contentiou­s photograph, published on all royal social media channels and widely picked up in Britain and across the world, was accompanie­d by a message signed by Kate.

“Thank you for your kind wishes and continued support over the last two months. Wishing everyone a Happy Mother’s Day,” it read.

But in a note to clients, AFP said it withdrawn the image after it had “come to light that the handout issued by Kensington Palace today of Kate and the kids had been altered”.

The AP said it had retracted the image because on “closer inspection, it appeared the source had manipulate­d the image in a way that did not meet AP’s photo standards”. Reuters said similar.

British newspapers quickly changed their front pages late on Sunday to reflect the brewing controvers­y.

 ?? Photo AFP ?? Kate apologised for the confusion the family photo caused.
Photo AFP Kate apologised for the confusion the family photo caused.

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