Bangkok Post

Prince Harry testifies in court

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Prince Harry yesterday took to the witness stand in a London court as part of claims against a British tabloid publisher, the latest in his legal battles with the press.

King Charles III’s younger son became the first senior British royal to give evidence in court for more than a century when he testified against Mirror Group Newspapers (MGN).

He and various other high-profile claimants accuse it of unlawful activities, including phone hacking.

The case is one of several that the 38-year-old prince has brought against British newspaper groups since stepping down from frontline royal duties in early 2020 and eventually relocating to California with his American wife Meghan Markle.

Prince Harry’s lawyer David Sherborne told London’s High Court on Monday that the prince was targeted by illegal informatio­n-gathering even as a young schoolboy and his phone would have been hacked on “multiple occasions”.

“No aspect of the young prince’s life was safe” from press intrusion, he submitted.

Representi­ng MGN, publisher of The Mirror and The Sunday People tabloids, barrister Andrew Green said there was “no evidence” that Prince Harry’s phone was tapped.

The prince had been expected to appear in the courtroom on Monday but did not take part in the hearing because of flying to the UK late on Sunday after celebratin­g his daughter Lilibet’s second birthday, according to Mr Sherborne.

The case against MGN centres on claims its tabloids conducted unlawful informatio­n-gathering to obtain stories about Prince Harry and other claimants, including two TV soap opera actors and the ex-wife of a comedian.

At the start of the trial on May 10, MGN apologised and admitted to “some evidence” of unlawful informatio­n-gathering, including for a story about Harry. But it denied voicemail tapping and also argued that some claims had been brought too late.

Mr Sherborne submitted that “industrial scale” illegal activities were happening at MGN and had been approved by senior executives.

Prince Harry, who is fifth in line to the throne, has had a turbulent relationsh­ip with the press and holds the media responsibl­e for the death of his mother Princess Diana, who died in a Paris car crash in 1997 while being pursued by paparazzi.

 ?? AFP ?? Britain’s Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex, arrives at the Royal Courts of Justice in central London yesterday.
AFP Britain’s Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex, arrives at the Royal Courts of Justice in central London yesterday.

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