The Guardian (USA)

Prince Andrew to continue work on mentor scheme, says palace

- Ben Quinn , Esther Addley and Matthew Weaver

Buckingham Palace has risked reigniting the controvers­y surroundin­g Prince Andrew by announcing he will continue his work with a business mentoring initiative, a day after he said he was stepping down from public duties.

The Duke of York will continue to be involved with Pitch@Palace, which has held events at Buckingham and St James’s palaces, “but will look at how he takes this forward outside of his public duties, and outside of the palace”, a statement said.

“Naturally there will be a transition period while this takes place,” Buckingham Palace said.

The decision to retain Prince Andrew’s links to the initiative, which corporate partners such as BT have abandoned in recent days, raised concerns that it muddied the waters of what had appeared to be a clean break from royal duties.

Sources at one backer of the prince’s initiative­s with the business community called for clarity. “To put it bluntly, this situation can’t last – the in-out-in-out hokey-cokey can’t last. So I would like to see some clarity on [his continuing involvemen­t].”

The decision signals a desire on the part of the palace to protect what was seen by some as a successful scheme. At least one backer had suggested to the Guardian that Andrew could make way for another royal, such as Prince

Harry or William.

A spotlight also fell on the Prince Andrew Charitable Trust, which holds a controllin­g stake in the Pitch@Palace initiative. Charity Commission filings show the trust spent approximat­ely £40,000 on charitable activities and £1.24m on raising funds in the 2017-18 financial year. Andrew is not listed as a trustee on the four-person board, which includes his private secretary, Amanda Thirsk.

Graham Smith, the chief executive of the campaign group Republic, said: “It’s not a surprise, given that royal charities we have looked into have similar patterns of minimal spending on charitable activities and quite a lot on fundraisin­g, but it does appear to be a vanity project for Prince Andrew and a way giving him something to do. The trust is obliged to take independen­t decisions, irrespecti­ve of whether it has his name on it.”

Huddersfie­ld University announced on Thursday that the prince had stood down as chancellor after a student panel called for his resignatio­n. On Thursday night, the students’ union at London Metropolit­an University said they would be lobbying for his removal as its patron.

On Wednesday in his statement saying he was standing down from

public duties, the prince said he was willing to help “any appropriat­e law enforcemen­t agency” with their investigat­ions after what he accepted was his “ill-judged associatio­n” with Jeffrey Epstein.

Lisa Bloom, a lawyer representi­ng five of Epstein’s victims, demanded further action by the prince. In a tweet she called on him and his staff to appear for civil deposition­s and produce all relevant documents about his contact with Epstein.

Later, when asked by BBC Radio 4’s

Today programme whether she would approach Prince Andrew to serve him with a subpoena to provide a legal statement about his time with Epstein, Bloom replied: “We may as part of our investigat­ion.”

She added: “It may be difficult to serve a deposition subpoena on him.

But we believe that nobody is above the law, and that everybody should have to answer questions, if they have relevant informatio­n, and he clearly does have relevant informatio­n.

It is understood there have been discussion­s within the royal family about the situation, with Prince

Andrew talking to the Queen and the Prince of Wales.

Andrew met the Queen at Buckingham Palace on Wednesday before his decision to step down was announced.

 ??  ?? Prince Andrew said when announcing he was stepping down from public duties that he was willing to help ‘any appropriat­e law enforcemen­t agency’ with investigat­ions. Photograph: David Hartley/Rex/ Shuttersto­ck
Prince Andrew said when announcing he was stepping down from public duties that he was willing to help ‘any appropriat­e law enforcemen­t agency’ with investigat­ions. Photograph: David Hartley/Rex/ Shuttersto­ck

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