The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

Meghan enjoying ‘choices’

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The Duchess of Sussex has criticised the constraint­s she faced when a working royal and said it was “liberating” to be able to “say yes” to Oprah Winfrey’s request for an interview.

Meghan has taken another swipe at the institutio­n of the monarchy in the latest clip released from her interview with the US chat show queen, saying she and Harry now have “the ability to make our own choices”.

Winfrey revealed she first approached the duchess for an in-depth chat a few months before their May 2018 wedding but was turned down with the proviso “perhaps there will be another time”.

Asked what was “right” about this moment to talk, Meghan replied in the clip aired on CBS This Morning: “Well, so many things. That we’re on the other side of a lot of... a lot of life experience that’s happened.

“Also that we have the ability to make our own choices in a way that I couldn’t have said yes to you then. That wasn’t my choice to make.

“As an adult who lived a really independen­t life to then go into this construct that is... different than I think what people imagine it to be, it’s really liberating to be able to have the right and the privilege in some ways to be able to say yes.”

Buckingham Palace meanwhile has begun an investigat­ion into allegation­s which surfaced in The Times that Meghan drove out two personal assistants and “humiliated” staff, leaving them in tears, which she denies.

Meanwhile, the Duke of Edinburgh has left the NHS hospital where he had heart surgery and been moved back to the private King Edward VII’s Hospital for continuing treatment, Buckingham Palace said.

Philip, 99, underwent a successful procedure for a pre-existing condition at St Bartholome­w’s Hospital in the City of London on Wednesday, just three months before his 100th birthday.

The palace said: “The duke is expected to remain in hospital for continuing treatment for a number of days.”

The duke has spent 17 nights in hospital, his longest ever stay.

He was initially admitted to King Edward VII’s - the royal family’s favoured hospital - in central London on February 16 after feeling unwell at Windsor Castle, before being moved by ambulance to St Bartholome­w’s on Monday.

Philip has been treated for heart problems in the past and in 2011 was rushed to hospital by helicopter from Sandringha­m after suffering chest pains as the royal family was preparing for Christmas.

Philip has spent most of lockdown at Windsor Castle with the Queen for their safety, alongside a reduced household of staff dubbed HMS Bubble.

The couple, who have been married for 73 years, received their first Covid-19 jabs in January.

The Queen, who has been carrying on with her official duties as head of state, is enjoying the company of two new corgi puppies.

 ??  ?? LIBERATING: Meghan said she and Harry are ‘on the other side of a lot of... life experience that’s happened’.
LIBERATING: Meghan said she and Harry are ‘on the other side of a lot of... life experience that’s happened’.
 ??  ?? The Duke of Edinburgh.
The Duke of Edinburgh.

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