The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Harry and William rift will take time to heal, claims writer

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The Duke of Sussex and the Duke of Cambridge did not speak for two months after the Sandringha­m summit sparked by the Megxit crisis, a royal writer has said.

Omid Scobie – co-author of Finding Freedom, which chronicles Harry and Meghan’s life as royals – said the Sussexes’ decision to reveal their plans to quit without warning the Windsors caused the most upset with William, and the rift between the brothers will take some time to heal.

Harry and Meghan released their bombshell statement about wanting to step down as senior royals in January, prompting the Queen to call a meeting at Sandringha­m with the duke, his older brother and their father, the Prince of Wales, to deal with the crisis.

The couple’s final public royal engagement was the Commonweal­th Day service at Westminste­r Abbey in March, where Kate was accused in the book of barely acknowledg­ing her sister-in-law.

Scobie, speaking on True Royalty TV’S The Royal Beat, said: “Where it really went wrong for Harry and Meghan and the Cambridges was that decision to go public with the road map to their new working model, the statements that weren’t discussed internally.

“That’s really what caused the most amount of hurt to William because he wears two hats.

“He’s not just the brother. He’s also a future king and he felt that damaged the reputation of the family, that it put family business out in the public domain when it should have been discussed privately.

“And there was a lot of hurt there that continues to this day.”

He added: “It’s why we saw such an awkward moment at that Commonweal­th service.

“The brothers had not spoken since around the time of the Sandringha­m summit. They hadn’t seen each other.”

Scobie also suggested that Harry, who has outlined his personal commitment to tackling institutio­nal racism, will at some point address his own past mistakes.

He was widely condemned in 2009 after being caught on film calling a former Army colleague a “P**i”, and in 2005 he caused outrage when he wore a Nazi soldier’s uniform complete with swastika for a fancy dress party.

Kensington Palace declined to comment.

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