Prince Harry attacks ‘vile’ press
LONDON: Prince Harry launched a fierce attack on the ‘‘vile’’ press yesterday, blaming tabloids for destroying his adolescence and later relationships, as he gave evidence for almost five hours in his lawsuit against a tabloid publisher.
As he became the first senior British royal to appear in a witness box in more than a century, the prince also said the thought of people unlawfully intruding into the private life of his late mother Princess Diana made him ‘‘feel physically sick’’.
The prince, the fifthinline to the throne, and 100 others are suing Mirror Group Newspapers (MGN), the publisher of the Daily Mirror, Sunday Mirror and Sunday People, at the High Court in London over allegations of widespread unlawful information gathering between 1991 and 2011.
In his 50page written witness statement and a day of crossexamination from MGN’s lawyer Andrew Green, the younger son of King Charles said he had been targeted since 1996 when he was a schoolboy.
Harry said the press would try to destroy his relationships with girlfriends, blaming them for his breakup with Chelsy Davy, for causing his circle of friends to shrink and for bouts of depression and paranoia.
He said he had been labelled ‘‘playboy prince’’, ‘‘thicko’’, ‘‘failure’’ and ‘‘dropout’’.
‘‘Looking back on it now, such behaviour on their part is utterly vile,’’ he wrote, saying the tabloids had incited ‘‘hatred and harassment’’ of his and his wife Meghan Markle’s lives.
In another section he asked: ‘‘How much more blood will stain their typing fingers before someone can put a stop to this madness?’’
Asked to whom he was referring, he said: ‘‘Some of the editors and journalists that are responsible for causing a lot of pain, upset and in some cases — perhaps inadvertently — death.’’
Green began his questioning respectfully, personally apologising to Harry on MGN’s behalf over one instance in which it admitted unlawful information gathering, saying ‘‘it should never have happened and it will not happen again’’.
The lawyer then forensically and with increasing hostility quizzed the prince over 33 newspaper articles, whose details the prince claims were obtained unlawfully.
Looking relaxed but serious, and speaking softly but firmly, the prince, the first senior British royal to give evidence for 130 years, said thousands if not millions of stories had been written about him, as Green pressed him on whether he had read the MGN articles in question at the time they were published.
The lawyer intimated that the distress he had suffered was caused by press coverage in general, not the specific MGN stories, and suggested they were based on details already in the public domain.
On a number of occasions, Green described the allegations as ‘‘total speculation’’.
Earlier this week, his lawyer David Sherborne said the prince’s late mother Princess Diana, had also been a victim of hacking, and the prince laid the blame on the Daily Mirror’s former editor Piers Morgan, who denies the allegations.
MGN, now owned by Reach, has previously admitted its titles were involved in phonehacking, settling more than 600 claims.
Prince Harry will give more evidence today. — Reuters