Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

MEGHAN, HARRY TO LIFT LID ON ROYAL SPLIT IN OPRAH WINFREY INTERVIEW

- Reuters letters@hindustant­imes.com

LONDON: A highly anticipate­d Oprah Winfrey interview with Prince Harry and his wife Meghan airs on US television later on Sunday, amid what one royal watcher called a “toxic” atmosphere between the couple and the British monarchy.

Not since the late Princess Diana appeared on television to share intimate details of her failed marriage to Harry’s father, Prince Charles, has an interview with members of the royal family attracted so much attention.

Having severed their official royal ties, the Duke and Duchess of Sussex will explain why they abandoned Britain to move to California and start new lives.

“I’m ready to talk,” Meghan, a former American actress, told Winfrey in an excerpt shown on U.S. station CBS on Friday, saying it was “liberating” to be able to give the interview.

Meghan and Harry’s detractors say the couple want the glamour of their positions without the dedication it requires or scrutiny it brings.

To their supporters, their treatment shows how an outdated British institutio­n has lashed out against a modern, biracial woman, with undertones of racism.

In another extract released ahead of the broadcast, Meghan accuses Buckingham Palace of “perpetuati­ng falsehoods” about them, saying they would not be silent in telling their story.

A source close to Harry and Meghan said they wanted to have their say as they began a new chapter - moving home with a baby on the way after ending royal duties and on the back of a successful court case against a tabloid newspaper.

Some experts said the interview could damage the royal family, just as the split between Charles and Diana did.

“The interview is a form of revenge,” royal commentato­r Richard Fitzwillia­ms told Reuters. “The link in people’s minds can only be the constant attacks on each other by Charles and Diana, which were so damaging to the monarchy in the 1990s.”

 ?? AFP ?? Kurdish women take part in a celebrator­y dance ahead of the Internatio­nal Women’s Day in the Syria’s northeaste­rn city of Qamishli.
AFP Kurdish women take part in a celebrator­y dance ahead of the Internatio­nal Women’s Day in the Syria’s northeaste­rn city of Qamishli.

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