The Gold Coast Bulletin

Major call but death could heal Windsors

- THE TIMES

grief over the Duke of Edinburgh’s death could be an ideal opportunit­y to mend any rifts within the royal family after Prince Harry’s move to the US, a former British prime minister has said.

Sir John Major (inset) made his comments Sunday before reports that the Duke of Sussex had arrived in Britain from California to attend his grandfathe­r’s funeral.

The extent of the tensions between Harry and other members of the royal family was made clear during a television interview he gave with his wife, Meghan, to Oprah Winfrey last month.

Sir John told The Andrew Marr Show on BBC1 he agreed with Cardinal Vincent Nichols, head of the Roman Catholic Church in England and Wales, who said that many families “gather and get over tension and broken relationsh­ips” at funerals.

“I’m sure he is right,” Sir John, 78, said. “The friction we are told has arisen is a friction better ended as speedily as possible. A shared emotion, a shared grief, at the present time because of the death of their grandfathe­r, I think is an ideal opportunit­y. I hope very much that it is possible to mend any rifts that may exist.”

The former PM said that the Queen had “earned the right to have a period of privacy in which to grieve with her family” after the loss of her husband of 73 years.

The former Conservati­ve leader was in office from 1990 to 1997, which covered the annus horribilis of 1992.

It is Harry’s first time in the UK since the couple stepped back from royal duties more than a year ago. He is expected to join his father, the Prince of Wales, and his brother, the Duke of Cambridge, at the funeral on Saturday when they are to walk behind the coffin as it heads to St George’s Chapel, at Windsor Castle.

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