Selasa, 09 Maret 2021

Covid cases and deaths at lowest for five months - The Times

Coronavirus cases and deaths have dropped to their lowest level for five months but Boris Johnson has rejected calls for an early easing of the lockdown.

As pupils returned to school yesterday in the first loosening of restrictions in England, Jenny Harries, the deputy chief medical officer, said the infection rate was now back “about where it was in the end of September”.

She also heralded a fall in deaths as “really good to be able to see”, linking it to the “extremely fast progress” of the vaccination programme.

Boris Johnson leads Covid press conference as schools reopen

Sixty-five deaths were reported yesterday, the lowest since October 12 and the second day in a row it has been below 100, with the seven-day average of 206 down 34.4 per cent from the week before.

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2021-03-09 09:00:00Z
52781421949505

Senin, 08 Maret 2021

Meghan and Harry interview: Palace silent and public divided after couple's bombshell Oprah discussion airs in UK - Sky News

Buckingham Palace remains silent almost 24 hours after Harry and Meghan's bombshell interview with Oprah Winfrey aired in the US - with the British public divided on the couple's explosive claims following its first UK broadcast.

While the world waits for a response from the Royal Family, celebrities and a number of charities have been expressing their support for the Duke and Duchess of Sussex over their comments - notably surrounding Meghan's openness about how her mental health was impacted by her time as a working royal.

Meghan revealed she had suicidal thoughts during her time in the family. The duchess claimed she asked to go somewhere for help, but a senior person in the institution told her it would not look good.

The duchess also claimed - to Oprah's apparent disbelief - that an unnamed member of the royal household had "concerns" about the skin colour of the couple's son Archie before he was born. Oprah later said Harry told her the person was not the Queen or Prince Philip.

Buckingham Palace has not yet commented on the allegations, which have left the British public split. The programme aired in full on UK television on Monday night, prompting huge reaction on social media.

It came hours after a new photo of Prince Harry, Meghan and Archie was shared online - one of the few glimpses the world has had of their young son since he was born in May 2019.

The most vociferous backers of the couple's interview have focused on their discussion about mental health, with some saying that Meghan had saved lives by discussing the issue.

More from Meghan Markle

One person on Twitter said: "The courage it took for Meghan to speak about her mental health is remarkable given the hell she was going through. The fact they are now sitting together voicing why they had to leave in order to protect their family. Nothing but respect and admiration."

Another tweet said: "I find it SHOCKING that William and Kate founded a mental health charity @heads_together but Meghan was refused any mental health support and Harry couldn't get her support either. It's actually disgusting. Plain and simple. Everyone deserves access to support when struggling."

Such sentiment has led to criticism for broadcaster Piers Morgan, who said "I'm sickened by what I've had to watch", calling it a "two hour trash-athon of our Royal Family, of the monarchy and everything the Queen has worked so hard for".

"I'm sorry, I don't believe a word she (Meghan) says."

The mental health charity Mind responded by saying: "We were disappointed and concerned to see Piers Morgan's comments on not believing Meghan's experiences about suicidal thoughts today.

"It's vital that when people reach out for support or share their experiences of ill mental health that they are treated with dignity, respect and empathy."

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Meghan claims Archie's skin colour was discussed

Meanwhile, Little Mix singer Leigh-Anne Pinnock said Meghan's interview showed the "underlying racism lying within the royal establishment".

Pinnock, who is black, shared a message of support for Meghan on Instagram, saying there is no "safety net" for those in the public eye, especially for women of colour.

She wrote: "What people may wish to believe and view as a 'privileged life' let this be a lesson to all of us. When you become known to the public there is no safety net to protect you from what people can fire out and say about you.

"We witness this all the time, particularly concerning women and more to the core, women of colour. Meghan has been dragged from the start and we have all witnessed it.

"I praise her strength and determination for speaking out on her experiences showing the underlying racism lying within the royal establishment."

In support of Prince Harry, former Wales rugby star Gareth Thomas posted a photo of him and the duke together.

He wrote: "MY definition of an amazing human being, is someone who is there for you when you are at your lowest. He was, and is still there. My choice is to LOVE the man I know, and the decisions he makes."

The duke had previously praised Thomas for going public with his HIV diagnosis.

Actor Hugh Jackman said he recommended people should watch the interview, saying: "When someone's brave enough to ask for help, we must listen."

The Terrence Higgins Trust also took to social media to show support for Harry and Meghan.

The charity, which helps people with HIV and AIDS - a cause close to Harry's late mother Princess Diana's heart - wrote: "Prince Harry and Meghan chose our event for World AIDS Day as their first ever official Royal engagement.

"Their shared and continuing passion to HIV awareness has been invaluable. When the world's spotlight was on them, they turned it on our cause. We will always be thankful."

But among the general public in the UK, opinion seems to be more mixed. A new YouGov poll asked people whether they thought the interview was appropriate or inappropriate.

Some 47% said it was inappropriate, while 21% said it was appropriate and 31% didn't know.

People were also asked how much sympathy they have for Harry and Meghan - 12% said a lot, 17% a fair amount, 23% said not very much, 33% none at all, and 15% didn't know.

And they were asked how much sympathy they have for senior members of the Royal Family - some 16% said a lot, 23% said a fair amount, 25% said not very much, 20% said none at all, and 16% did not know.

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A special guest panel take a deeper look at the allegations of racism made by Meghan and Harry in Oprah interview

On a special programme ahead of the interview's full UK debut, Sky News brought together comedian Gina Yashere, lawyer and activist Dr Shola Mos-Shogbamimu and actor Kelechi Okafor.

They gave their thoughts on the allegations of racism from within the royal household.

Yashere said she "wasn't surprised", adding: "We knew there was racism. Britain's wealth is built on the backs of colonialism and slavery.

"They (Harry and Meghan) held nothing back... and I'm glad now it's all out in the open for everybody to discuss."

Dr Shola said it was "pure racism" and there was no way to "misunderstand" the comments about Archie's skin.

Okafor added that she is "tired" of the narrative that the royals are "colour blind" or don't see colour, saying: "Anti-blackness is inherent in the entire institution."

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Meghan: 'I just didn't want to be alive anymore'

Meanwhile, in America, where more than 17 million tuned in to watch it overnight, Sky's US correspondent Greg Milam said people in Los Angeles who he had spoken to had taken the side of Harry and Meghan.

Milam said people "have some very strong views particularly to that question of the discussions about the colour of Archie's skin".

"In this climate in America, in the Black Lives Matter climate, there are some serious questions, some very big anger amongst people. And people here are asking for an answer from the Royal Family," he said.

"They want to know who it was that had those discussions - and what is going to be done to address what was contained in that interview."

"For so long, the Royal Family has been a bit of a distant soap opera. But now this is very much in close focus for them because we are talking about one of their own, an American citizen making allegations about the Royal Family."

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'Queen and Prince Philip not behind Archie remarks'

The newly-shared black and white image of Harry, Meghan and Archie was taken by photographer Misan Harriman.

It captures a smiling, pregnant Meghan, stood by a tree cuddling Archie, as Harry stands behind her, embracing his wife, who is due to have a girl this summer.

Harriman wrote on social media: "What wonderful news to celebrate on International Women's Day! Congratulations my friends, and welcome to the #girldad club H".

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2021-03-09 00:22:30Z
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Palace silent and public divided after Harry and Meghan's bombshell Oprah interview airs in UK - Sky News

Buckingham Palace remains silent almost 24 hours after Harry and Meghan's bombshell interview with Oprah Winfrey aired in the US - with the British public divided on the couple's explosive claims following its first UK broadcast.

While the world waits for a response from the Royal Family, celebrities and a number of charities have been expressing their support for the Duke and Duchess of Sussex over their comments - notably surrounding Meghan's openness about how her mental health was impacted by her time as a working royal.

Meghan revealed she had suicidal thoughts during her time in the family. The duchess claimed she asked to go somewhere for help, but a senior person in the institution told her it would not look good.

The duchess also claimed - to Oprah's apparent disbelief - that an unnamed member of the royal household had "concerns" about the skin colour of the couple's son Archie before he was born. Oprah later said Harry told her the person was not the Queen or Prince Philip.

Buckingham Palace has not yet commented on the allegations, which have left the British public split. The programme aired in full on UK television on Monday night, prompting huge reaction on social media.

It came hours after a new photo of Prince Harry, Meghan and Archie was shared online - one of the few glimpses the world has had of their young son since he was born in May 2019.

The most vociferous backers of the couple's interview have focused on their discussion about mental health, with some saying that Meghan had saved lives by discussing the issue.

More from Meghan Markle

One person on Twitter said: "The courage it took for Meghan to speak about her mental health is remarkable given the hell she was going through. The fact they are now sitting together voicing why they had to leave in order to protect their family. Nothing but respect and admiration."

Another tweet said: "I find it SHOCKING that William and Kate founded a mental health charity @heads_together but Meghan was refused any mental health support and Harry couldn't get her support either. It's actually disgusting. Plain and simple. Everyone deserves access to support when struggling."

Such sentiment has led to criticism for broadcaster Piers Morgan, who said "I'm sickened by what I've had to watch", calling it a "two hour trash-athon of our Royal Family, of the monarchy and everything the Queen has worked so hard for".

"I'm sorry, I don't believe a word she (Meghan) says."

The mental health charity Mind responded by saying: "We were disappointed and concerned to see Piers Morgan's comments on not believing Meghan's experiences about suicidal thoughts today.

"It's vital that when people reach out for support or share their experiences of ill mental health that they are treated with dignity, respect and empathy."

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Meghan claims Archie's skin colour was discussed

Meanwhile, Little Mix singer Leigh-Anne Pinnock said Meghan's interview showed the "underlying racism lying within the royal establishment".

Pinnock, who is black, shared a message of support for Meghan on Instagram, saying there is no "safety net" for those in the public eye, especially for women of colour.

She wrote: "What people may wish to believe and view as a 'privileged life' let this be a lesson to all of us. When you become known to the public there is no safety net to protect you from what people can fire out and say about you.

"We witness this all the time, particularly concerning women and more to the core, women of colour. Meghan has been dragged from the start and we have all witnessed it.

"I praise her strength and determination for speaking out on her experiences showing the underlying racism lying within the royal establishment."

In support of Prince Harry, former Wales rugby star Gareth Thomas posted a photo of him and the duke together.

He wrote: "MY definition of an amazing human being, is someone who is there for you when you are at your lowest. He was, and is still there. My choice is to LOVE the man I know, and the decisions he makes."

The duke had previously praised Thomas for going public with his HIV diagnosis.

Actor Hugh Jackman said he recommended people should watch the interview, saying: "When someone's brave enough to ask for help, we must listen."

The Terrence Higgins Trust also took to social media to show support for Harry and Meghan.

The charity, which helps people with HIV and AIDS - a cause close to Harry's late mother Princess Diana's heart - wrote: "Prince Harry and Meghan chose our event for World AIDS Day as their first ever official Royal engagement.

"Their shared and continuing passion to HIV awareness has been invaluable. When the world's spotlight was on them, they turned it on our cause. We will always be thankful."

But among the general public in the UK, opinion seems to be more mixed. A new YouGov poll asked people whether they thought the interview was appropriate or inappropriate.

Some 47% said it was inappropriate, while 21% said it was appropriate and 31% didn't know.

People were also asked how much sympathy they have for Harry and Meghan - 12% said a lot, 17% a fair amount, 23% said not very much, 33% none at all, and 15% didn't know.

And they were asked how much sympathy they have for senior members of the Royal Family - some 16% said a lot, 23% said a fair amount, 25% said not very much, 20% said none at all, and 16% did not know.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

A special guest panel take a deeper look at the allegations of racism made by Meghan and Harry in Oprah interview

On a special programme ahead of the interview's full UK debut, Sky News brought together comedian Gina Yashere, lawyer and activist Dr Shola Mos-Shogbamimu and actor Kelechi Okafor.

They gave their thoughts on the allegations of racism from within the royal household.

Yashere said she "wasn't surprised", adding: "We knew there was racism. Britain's wealth is built off the back of colonialism and slavery.

"I'm glad that they didn't hold back and now it's all out in the open for everyone to discuss."

Dr Shola said it was "pure racism" and there was no way to "misunderstand" the comments about Archie's skin.

Okafor added that she is "tired" of the narrative that the royals are "colour blind" or don't see colour, saying: "Anti-blackness is inherent in the entire institution."

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Meghan: 'I just didn't want to be alive anymore'

Meanwhile, in America, where more than 17 million tuned in to watch it overnight, Sky's US correspondent Greg Milam said people in Los Angeles who he had spoken to had taken the side of Harry and Meghan.

Milam said people "have some very strong views particularly to that question of the discussions about the colour of Archie's skin".

"In this climate in America, in the Black Lives Matter climate, there are some serious questions, some very big anger amongst people. And people here are asking for an answer from the Royal Family," he said.

"They want to know who it was that had those discussions - and what is going to be done to address what was contained in that interview."

"For so long, the Royal Family has been a bit of a distant soap opera. But now this is very much in close focus for them because we are talking about one of their own, an American citizen making allegations about the Royal Family."

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

'Queen and Prince Philip not behind Archie remarks'

The newly-shared black and white image of Harry, Meghan and Archie was taken by photographer Misan Harriman.

It captures a smiling, pregnant Meghan, stood by a tree cuddling Archie, as Harry stands behind her, embracing his wife, who is due to have a girl this summer.

Harriman wrote on social media: "What wonderful news to celebrate on International Women's Day! Congratulations my friends, and welcome to the #girldad club H".

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2021-03-08 23:48:37Z
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From fairy tale to culture war: Britain gripped by royal race row - Financial Times

At the time of Prince Harry and Meghan Markle’s wedding in 2018, many commentators seized on signs Britain’s royal family was embracing the 21st century.

The young prince was marrying a mixed-race, divorcee from America who showed independent spirit like Harry’s late mother Diana, the princess of Wales, and who was being welcomed with great fanfare into the royal household.

“It was as if the exclusivity of royalty and blue blood could be erased with a photo-op,” one Black British commentator, who asked not to be named, said in hindsight of the hopes the wedding once inspired.

Any vestiges of that fairy tale reached a bitter end during the US television personality Oprah Winfrey’s two-hour interview with the former royals when it was aired on CBS in America on Sunday night.

The most explosive revelations in the interview, carried out in California where the duke and duchess of Sussex have exiled themselves since they retreated from royal life last year, revolved around race.

There were “concerns and conversations about how dark his skin might be when he’s born”, Markle said about the couple’s then unborn child, Archie, prompting Winfrey to pause. Harried and sometimes vilified by Britain’s tabloid newspapers, Markle was driven to feeling suicidal, she said, but was denied the help and protection she sought from the royal household.

Family firm: Four generations of royals on the balcony of Buckingham Palace in 2019 © Neil Mockford/GC Images/Getty

While the revelations were not directed at any specific member of the royal family, they painted the institution of the monarchy in an unflattering light at a difficult time for race relations in Britain, in the wake of the Black Lives Matter protests unleashed on both sides of the Atlantic by the death of George Floyd last year, and the high number of black and minority ethnic victims of the coronavirus pandemic.

Markle’s revelations — and those of Prince Harry, who sat beside her in the latter half of the interview and said his father, Prince Charles, had at one point refused to take his calls — have split opinion in Britain, prompting torrents of commentary, much of it highly partisan to one side or another, in the media and on social media.

Tim Bale, professor of politics at Queen Mary University of London and a historian of the ruling Tory party, saw dangers that these polemics will feed into the culture wars unleashed in the wake of the 2016 Brexit referendum, providing ammunition for some politicians to exploit.

“If they can portray Meghan and Harry as prince and princess of woke in opposition to the rest of the royal family and establishment they will be tempted to do so,” he said.

The interview has prompted an outpouring of support for Markle from some members of the British Black community. Shola Mos-Shogbamimu, the author, lawyer and women’s rights activist, said that the Queen herself should have intervened to try to halt the “divisive and hateful treatment” of Markle by some sections of the media.

“I get that families have feuds, and I have no interest in getting into that. But if you can treat one person that way, if you think it’s OK for a member of your family to be treated like that, how can I trust you, as the monarchy, to speak up for me. This is a matter of principle,” Mos-Shogbamimu said.

The palace made no response to the revelations ahead of their broadcast in the UK on Monday evening. But it had vocal defenders.

“Meghan and Harry's nauseating two-hour Oprah whine-athon was a disgraceful diatribe of cynical race-baiting propaganda designed to damage the Queen as her husband lies in hospital — and destroy the Monarchy,” television presenter Piers Morgan wrote in the Daily Mail.

Also describing the interview as a betrayal, Penny Junor, a royal biographer, wrote in the Sunday Mail newspaper: “It is hugely damaging for Harry too. For him the monarchy is not some quaint, outdated institution, as it is for millions of Americans . . . For Harry the monarchy is family.”

For the Queen, who turns 95 next month, the saga bears echoes of what she called her “annus horribilis” back in 1992, when the household was riven by divorces, and Diana published a damaging account of her broken marriage with Charles.

Support for the monarchy in the UK has remained consistently strong overall, however there is a growing generational divide, according to the latest survey on the issue by YouGov © Alamy

It comes as her 99-year-old husband Prince Philip recovers from a heart procedure in hospital, and after a year in which her second son Andrew was forced to step back from royal duties as a result of allegations surrounding his friendship with Jeffrey Epstein, the disgraced former financier and convicted paedophile. Prince Andrew has denied wrongdoing.

It also weakens one of the few institutions that binds the United Kingdom together, at a time independence movements in Scotland, Northern Ireland and, to a lesser extent, Wales have all gained ground, strengthening the case for wholesale reform.

Support for the monarchy in the UK has remained consistently strong overall, however there is a growing generational divide, according to the latest survey on the issue by YouGov, carried out at the end of 2020. More than eight in 10 people aged over 65 preferred to preserve the monarchy over an elected head of state, compared with only half as many among 18-24 year olds. There is also a roughly even split among adults over who should succeed the queen, Charles or his son William.

“When Meghan came into the royal family as Diana before, they had their second chance to move into the 21st century. But rather than embracing these people, they tried to smother them and pretend the past is still there,” said Norman Baker, a former government minister and author of a book on the cost of maintaining the monarchy And what do you do? What The Royal Family Don't Want You To Know.

Referring to reports in the British press of a bullying complaint against Markle filed by a former royal aide, he added: “I do believe she did cause difficulties for people who worked for her, but there is no excuse for the way the palace has handled this.” Markle has denied the bullying claims.

Only a few hours before the Winfrey interview was to be aired in Britain, prime minister Boris Johnson on Monday was among the few who did not have an opinion on the row, only saying he had “the highest admiration for the Queen” and the work she did “for the country and the Commonwealth”.

“I really think when it comes to matters to do with the royal family the right thing for prime ministers is to say nothing. And nothing is what I propose to say on this matter,” Johnson said.

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2021-03-08 19:32:41Z
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COVID-19: Boris Johnson hails 'emotional' return of schools - but repeats warning on target dates for easing lockdown - Sky News

Boris Johnson has hailed the return of schools across England as a "big" and "emotional" day - but warned it will impact on the spread of coronavirus and there is no guarantee the country will reopen on the target dates set out.

Speaking at a news conference in Downing Street, the prime minister said that it is "more vital than ever to follow the rules" so that the roadmap to easing lockdown can continue as planned.

Mr Johnson said the government would be "driven by data not dates" when deciding whether to remove more restrictions in the coming weeks ahead of the next planned date of 29 March.

Follow live COVID-19 updates from the UK and around the world

Asked whether encouraging data from recent days - including daily deaths dropping below 100 - might tempt him to move forward some of his targets, he said: "We've got to remain prudent - the whole point of this roadmap is that it's intended to be cautious but irreversible.

"And we think we can do that because of the vaccine rollout.

"I think people would really rather trade some urgency and some haste in favour of security and certainty about those dates that we have set out."

More from Boris Johnson

The prime minister added that infection rates and the number of people in hospital are still "very high by the standards of last year".

He reminded the public that other European countries are seeing cases rise and to remember that every time that has happened "it is not too long after that we see an increase in this country as well".

Mr Johnson also said vaccine certificates for international travel will be "a feature of our life in the future" - although he acknowledged they "raise all sorts of issues" which are being examined by Cabinet Office Minister Michael Gove, who is heading up a review into the issue.

Dr Jenny Harries, deputy chief medical officer, said she expected cases to rise in the first two weeks but to then subside
Image: Dr Jenny Harries, deputy chief medical officer, said she expected cases to rise in the first two weeks but to then subside

Dr Jenny Harries, England's deputy chief medical officer, added that they are expecting to see a rise in cases in the first two weeks schools are open - but we can be "very optimistic going forward" due to the vaccination programme and testing.

"The likelihood of a case going into a school and larger numbers coming out to self-isolate are now much smaller," she said.

"There may be a short period where larger numbers of children come out [to self-isolate] but that will settle down.

"It's really important to look beyond the first two weeks."

She added that testing for children and their families will take some getting used to but will likely "diminish the number of community transmission cases which could come into schools".

"So schools will be inherently safer places, but equally it will reach back into families," Dr Harries said.

Monday 29 March is when it is hoped more social rules can be relaxed, including the resumption of outdoor sports and the government's "Stay at Home" message being dropped.

From that date, up to six people from different households or a larger group from two households will hopefully be allowed to meet outside, including in private gardens.

All primary schools returned today while secondary pupils will have staggered returns this week as part of the first step to easing the lockdown imposed on England at the beginning of January.

Secondary school children are being urged to take two lateral flow tests a week, with the first three taken in school then the rest at home where their households have also been asked to take twice-weekly tests.

Other measures have also been eased slightly from today, with one person allowed to meet another from a different household outside for recreation, such as a coffee or a picnic, instead of just exercise.

Care home residents are also allowed to choose one named visitor from today.

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2021-03-08 17:26:15Z
52781421949505

Meghan and Harry interview: Boris Johnson says he has always had the highest admiration for the Queen - Sky News

Boris Johnson says he has always had the "highest admiration" for the Queen but he would not comment on other Royal Family matters.

Speaking at a Downing Street news conference, the prime minister was asked about allegations made during Meghan and Prince Harry's explosive interview with Oprah Winfrey, which aired in the US overnight.

In the two-hour broadcast, reportedly watched by more than 17 million Americans, the Duchess of Sussex said "concerns" were raised by an unnamed member of the royal household about baby Archie's skin colour before he was born.

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Meghan claims Archie's skin colour was discussed

Latest updates after Sussexes' Oprah interview

She also revealed she had suicidal thoughts during her time in the Royal Family. The duchess said she asked to go somewhere to get help, and approached a senior person in the institution, but was told it would not look good.

The prime minister was asked by a reporter at the news briefing whether the allegation about Archie, and the accusation that the family failed to look after Meghan's mental health, should be investigated by Buckingham Palace.

Mr Johnson responded by saying: "I have always had the highest admiration for the Queen and the unifying role that she plays in our country and across the Commonwealth.

More from Meghan Markle

"As for all other matters to do with the Royal Family, I have spent a long time now not commenting on Royal Family matters and I don't intend to depart from that today."

When asked later whether he believed the Royal Family was racist, he told the news conference: "I really think that when it comes to matters to do with the Royal Family, the right thing for prime ministers to say is nothing and nothing is the thing that I propose to say today about that particular matter."

Sir Keir Starmer said Labour have been 'very critical' and 'very concerned' about the impact of the chancellor's budget.
Image: Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer says Meghan's allegations should be taken 'very, very seriously'

Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer has said allegations made by Meghan in the interview should be taken seriously.

Earlier today, when asked if Mr Johnson agreed with Sir Keir, the PM's spokesman said: "It is a matter for the Palace but the prime minister hasn't seen those interviews."

Pressed on whether allegations of racism should be taken seriously, the spokesman replied: "Neither he nor I have seen the interview."

When asked if it was unacceptable to ask questions about the skin colour of an unborn child, Mr Johnson's spokesman said the PM had said in the past that there was "no place in society" for racism.

Sir Keir said Meghan's claims should be taken "very, very seriously".

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Meghan: 'I just didn't want to be alive anymore'

Speaking during a visit to a school in Dagenham in east London, he said: "It is really sad to see the family in turmoil like this.

"The issues that Meghan has raised of racism and mental health are really serious issues.

"It is a reminder that too many people experience racism in 21st-century Britain. We have to take that very, very seriously.

"Nobody, but nobody, should be prejudiced (against) because of the colour of their skin or because of their mental health issues.

"This is bigger than the Royal Family. For too many years we have been too dismissive and too willing to put these issues to one side."

The party's shadow education secretary told Sky News that Buckingham Palace should investigate the claims.

Kate Green said the allegations were "really distressing, shocking", adding: "And if there are allegations of racism, I would expect them to be treated by the palace with the utmost seriousness and fully investigated."

Analysis: Johnson was not afraid to speak out when he was a newspaper columnist

By Jon Craig, chief political correspondent

The prime minister gives a bland answer about his highest admiration for the Queen and her unifying role, but claims he has spent a long time not commenting on royal matters and isn't going to depart from that.

Really? He was never afraid to speak out in his days as a newspaper columnist.

However, his strong backing for the Queen in the war of the Windsors will not doubt be interpreted by some as a coded slapdown for Meghan and Harry.

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2021-03-08 17:15:00Z
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Meghan and Harry interview: Tabloid racism 'large part' of why we left UK, says duke - BBC News

Prince Harry
Harpo Productions/CBS

The Duke of Sussex has said racism from the tabloid press that filtered into the rest of society was a "large part" of why he and his wife left the UK.

Prince Harry told Oprah Winfrey that the UK tabloid media is "bigoted" and creates a "toxic environment" of "control and fear".

He said he thought the Prince of Wales had to "make peace with it".

The Society of Editors said the media is not bigoted and is holding the "rich and powerful to account".

Meghan said social media had made the relationship with the press like "the wild, wild West" and said the Royal Family's press operation failed to defend her and Harry from untrue stories.

In the much-anticipated interview with Oprah, Harry and Meghan covered a range of deeply personal topics, including racism, mental health, their relationship with the media and Royal Family dynamics.

The two-hour interview was broadcast last night in the US and is due to be screened in the UK on ITV at 21:00 GMT on Monday night and on ITV Hub, courtesy of Harpo Productions/CBS.

In other key revelations:

  • Meghan said she found life within the Royal Family so difficult that at times she "didn't want to be alive any more"
  • She said Harry had been asked by an unnamed family member "how dark" their son Archie's skin might be
  • Oprah later said the family member was not the Queen or the Duke of Edinburgh
  • The couple announced their second child, which is due in the summer, is a girl
  • They exchanged vows in a ceremony led by the Archbishop of Canterbury in their "backyard" three days before they were legally married at their public wedding in May 2018
  • Harry said his brother and father were "trapped within the system" of the Royal Family
  • He said his family cut him off financially at the beginning of last year and his father stopped taking his calls
  • But Harry said he loved his brother "to bits" and wanted to heal his relationship with both him and his father
  • Meghan said she phoned the Queen after Prince Philip went into hospital last month

Asked about the claims that the Royal Family had failed to look after the Sussexes' mental health and that one family member had speculated on their unborn child's skin colour, Prime Minister Boris Johnson declined to comment, except to say he "always had the highest admiration for the Queen and the unifying role she plays".

He said "when it comes to matters to do with the Royal Family, the right thing for prime ministers to say is nothing", after being asked specifically if he believed the Royal Family was racist.

In previously unseen footage from the three hour 20 minutes interview, Oprah asked the prince if the couple left the UK because of racism. Prince Harry replied: "It was a large part of it."

He said that shortly after the couple announced they would step back from royal duties, someone who was "friends with a lot of the editors" had warned him about their confrontational stance with the press: "Please don't do this with the media, they will destroy your life."

The conversation happened at a fundraising dinner in January 2020, a few months after Meghan sued the Mail on Sunday over a private letter and Prince Harry said he feared his wife would fall "victim to the same powerful forces" that he lost his mother to.

The friend of the editors told him: "You need to understand that the UK is very bigoted." But the duke responded: "The UK is not bigoted, the UK press is bigoted, specifically the tabloids."

Speaking to Oprah, the prince added: "But, unfortunately, if the source of information is inherently corrupt or racist or biased then that filters out to the rest of society."

He said that "sadly" no-one in the family had said they were sorry that the couple felt they had to move away from royal life because they did not feel supported.

"The feeling is that this was our decision, therefore the consequences are on us."

He said it was "really hard because I am part of the system with them, I always have been".

Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex and Meghan, Duchess of Sussex depart Canada House on January 07, 2020 in London, England
Getty Images

Prince Harry said he is "very aware" that his brother Prince William "can't leave that system but I have".

Asked if William wanted to leave the system, he replied: "I don't know, I can't speak for him."

Harry said the "relationship and that control and the fear by the UK tabloids, it's a really, it's a toxic environment".

The duke said he will "always be there" for his brother and the rest of his family and he has "tried to help them to see what has happened".

His father, the Prince of Wales, "had to make peace" with the relationship with the media.

But Meghan said she and the duke could not make peace with it themselves, saying it was "different" because of social media, describing it as "like the wild, wild West".

The Society of Editors criticised the couple for accusing the media of racism without "any supporting evidence".

"The UK media has never shied away from holding a spotlight up to those in positions of power, celebrity or influence. If sometimes the questions asked are awkward and embarrassing, then so be it, but the press is most certainly not racist," said executive director Ian Murray.

'Obsession'

In another unaired clip shared by broadcaster CBS on social media, Prince Harry said that in January last year the couple had an invitation to visit the Queen at Sandringham suddenly withdrawn by her private secretary, who said she was "busy all week".

"When you're head of the firm there are people around you that give you advice. And what has also made me really sad is some of that advice has been really bad," said Harry.

Also in the unaired footage, the Duchess of Sussex said her treatment in the press had been worse than other royals, saying that although the Duchess of Cambridge being branded "Waity Katie" before her marriage to Prince William must have been "really hard", it was "not the same".

"If a member of his family would comfortably say 'we've all had to deal with things that are rude', rude and racist are not the same," she said.

"And equally you've also had a press team that goes on the record to defend you, especially when they know something's not true, and that didn't happen for us."

Meghan said there had been an "obsession about anything in my world", including the media offering money to track down her parents.

"I did everything I could to protect both of them in that media frenzy for over a year," she told Oprah.

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2021-03-08 17:12:15Z
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