The Guardian (USA)

Duchess of Sussex faced ‘disgusting’ threats to life, senior Met officer says

- Pippa Crerar and Kiran Stacey

The Duchess of Sussex was subject to multiple “disgusting” threats against her life, a senior police officer has revealed, adding they were “very real” and led to prosecutio­ns.

Neil Basu, the outgoing assistant commission­er of the Metropolit­an police, told Channel 4 News the threats were deemed credible, adding that the material would have left her feeling “under threat all of the time”.

The remarks throw new light on Prince Harry’s attempt to get automatic police protection for his family when they are in the UK.

In his final interview before leaving Scotland Yard, Basu, the country’s most senior officer of colour, criticised home secretary Suella Braverman’s “dream” of sending migrants to Rwanda as “inexplicab­le” and suggested his outspoken views on racism may have cost him promotion to the top job in policing.

But it was his comments on the threats to Meghan’s life that appear to reveal why Prince Harry told the high court earlier this year that he would not feel safe when visiting his family under existing security arrangemen­ts.

The Duke of Sussex subsequent­ly won the right to challenge a Home Office decision not to grant him automatic police protection when he is in the UK – despite offering to pay for it himself.

When asked if there had been many credible threats against Meghan’s life,

Basu answered: “Absolutely, and if you’d seen the stuff that was written and you were receiving it … the kind of rhetoric that’s online, if you don’t know what I know, you would feel under threat all of the time.”

He added: “We had teams investigat­ing it. People have been prosecuted for those threats.”

The Sussexes have been approached for comment.

Basu became an officer at the Met in 1992, rising through the ranks to be appointed as the assistant commission­er for specialist operations in 2018. He has attracted criticism among Conservati­ve MPs for his outspoken views about race and policing, such as criticisin­g elements of Prevent, the government anti-terrorism programme which has targeted Muslim extremism.

He was tipped as a future Met commission­er, but did not apply to succeed Cressida Dick earlier this year, with government sources saying they were opposed to his candidacy.

Basu later applied to be head of the National Crime Agency, but was turned down for the job by the Home Office without any explanatio­n.

He told Channel 4 News: “I do know that No 10 has previously interfered in me being appointed to positions. And the reason for that, I have not been told.

 ?? Photograph: FD/Francis Dias/Newspix Internatio­nal ?? The Duchess of Sussex at the funeral service for Queen Elizabeth at Westminste­r Abbey.
Photograph: FD/Francis Dias/Newspix Internatio­nal The Duchess of Sussex at the funeral service for Queen Elizabeth at Westminste­r Abbey.
 ?? ?? Neil Basu in 2019. Photograph: Yui Mok/
Neil Basu in 2019. Photograph: Yui Mok/

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