Royal

Prince Harry Exposes His True Self After King Charles’ Shocking ‘Olive Branch’ Move!

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Harry is “annoyed” ahead of his return to the UK return despite reportedly refusing an offer to stay in  Buckingham Palace.

Prince Harry has shown his true colours over the offer of a King Charles olive branch ahead of his solo return to the UK. Harry is “annoyed” ahead of his return to the UK return despite reportedly refusing an offer to stay in Buckingham Palace.

Harry is thought to have turned down the offer from the monarch ahead of his High Court trial against News Group Newspapers, which starts on Tuesday. Former Royal Family BBC correspondent Jennie Bond suggested that rejecting residency at Buckingham Palace was a PR mistake.

Ms Bond said: “I think he will be mildly annoyed that he is not being given full police protection, but this is a step in the right direction as far as he is concerned.” She added: “I think it is a PR mistake to turn down accommodation at Buckingham Palace, where security is guaranteed and already paid for.”

Ms Bond said: “It seems unreasonable to expect police protection around a hotel just because he chooses to turn down a perfectly good offer of secure accommodation.” Ms ond told the Mirror: “I still don’t think he will feel comfortable bringing Meghan and the children here unless there is a guarantee of full police protection.

“And I suspect Meghan has no particular desire to come back here anyway.” Harry faces up to four days of “very extensive” questioning in the witness box in the legal action he and Tom Watson, a former Labour deputy prime minister, brought against News Group Newspapers (NGN) over allegations of unlawful information gathering. NGN denies the allegations.

Anthony Hudson KC, for NGN, accused the claimants of trying to call irrelevant witnesses over “generic issues” relating to their allegations. He said Harry had added: “They’ve settled because they’ve had to settle. So, therefore, one of the main reasons for seeing this through is accountability, because I am that last person that can actually achieve that, and also closure for those 1,300 people and families.”

Hudson told the judge: “We say what this is clearly about is almost by definition a public inquiry. That is what the duke is seeking. That’s what he’s trying to achieve through this litigation. Civil litigation must not be turned into a public inquiry”.