Duchess of Sussex

Harry and Meghan reveal surprise RSVP to King’s coronation



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Prince Harry and wife Meghan Markle have finally decided about attending the historic coronation of the King in May.

The controversial couple revealed their RSVP response after months of speculation about whether they would be at the glittering event at Westminster Abbey on May 6.

In identical statements on Thursday (AEST), the Duke and Duchess of Sussex and Buckingham Palace said Harry would be at the coronation of his father.

But the duchess will not go. Instead she will remain in California with the couple’s two young children, Prince Archie and Princess Lilibet.

It is not known whether Prince Harry, who is not a working royal, will play an official role at the coronation.

The King will be crowned on May 6 in a ceremony that dates back 1000 years, surrounded by foreign heads of state and dignitaries.

The Sussexes’ eldest, Archie, turns four on the same day.

The participation of the King’s youngest son had been in doubt after the 38-year-old heavily criticised his family in a book and Netflix documentary series.

“Buckingham Palace is pleased to confirm that The Duke of Sussex will attend the Coronation Service at Westminster Abbey,” the palace spokesperson said.

“The Duchess of Sussex will remain in California with Prince Archie and Princess Lilibet.”

Some media reports had suggested that Harry wanted an apology from his family before he agreed to attend the coronation – an event that will be marked in Britain by a public holiday.

Asked in one interview in January whether he would attend, Harry said: “There’s a lot that can happen between now and then. But the door is always open.”

Buckingham Palace had made clear that Harry – one of the most popular members of the royal family before he left the country – had been invited to the event.

Harry and Meghan stepped down from royal duties in 2020 and moved to California, saying they wanted to forge an independent life, free of the scrutiny of the British press.

They agreed with the royal family that they would not take part in any future official royal events or tours.

They have been seen in Britain on only a handful of occasions since they left, including for last September’s funeral of Queen Elizabeth, who died after a 70-year reign.

Tensions soon emerged following their departure and in recent months Harry has published a memoir containing intimate revelations about the royal family while the couple also appeared in a Netflix documentary series.

Among their many accusations, they said some royals, including Harry’s stepmother Camilla and brother William – the heir to the throne – had leaked stories to tabloid newspapers to protect themselves or enhance their reputations.

They also said the royal family had dismissed the race-related hounding of Meghan by the press as a rite of passage and compared her treatment to the intense media intrusion that the duke’s mother Princess Diana had suffered before her death.

Harry was last in Britain in late March, attending a court case he and other high-profile figures have brought against the publisher of the Daily Mail newspaper over allegations of phone-tapping and other privacy breaches.

The publisher denies the accusations.

The case is one of several that the prince has brought against British newspapers.





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