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Zelenskyy, atomic agency chief discuss nuclear plant fears

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Zelenskyy, atomic agency chief discuss nuclear plant fears

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ZAPORIZHZHIA, Ukraine — The U.N.’s atomic energy chief warned Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy in a meeting Monday that the perilous situation at Europe’s largest nuclear plant “isn’t getting any better” as relentless fighting in the area puts the facility at risk of a nuclear disaster.

The Zaporizhzhia plant, which continues to power war-torn Ukraine, has lost several of its power transmission cables during Russia’s war, and on multiple occasions has had to switch to emergency diesel generators to power its essential cooling systems preventing a meltdown.

International Atomic Energy Agency Director-General Rafael Grossi plans to visit the Russian-held plant this week. The Vienna-based agency has staff permanently deployed at the plant following Russia’s invasion 13 months ago.

In the meeting, covered exclusively by The Associated Press, Grossi said the situation at the plant remains tense because of the heavy military presence around it and a blackout that recently struck the facility, something that has occurred repeatedly since Russian forces took it over last year.

Earlier this month, fighting interrupted power supply to the plant for half a day, forcing staff to activate backup generators.

Grossi expressed alarm at that development. “Each time we are rolling a dice,” he told his agency at the time. “And if we allow this to continue time after time, then one day our luck will run out.”

Grossi and Zelenskyy met in the the city of Zaporizhzhia, which is in Ukrainian-held territory, about 50 kilometers (30 miles) northeast of the nuclear plant with the same name.

The IAEA announced in January it was placing teams of experts at all four of Ukraine’s nuclear power plants to reduce the risk of accidents.

The agency’s permanent presence at all of Ukraine’s nuclear facilities marked an unprecedented expansion for the agency. That presence includes the now-closed Chernobyl plant whose deadly nuclear accident in 1986 spread fallout over much of Europe.

Grossi emphasized that his seventh trip to Ukraine underlined his commitment and support for “as long as it takes.”

Also attending the meeting were other IAEA officials, the head of the presidential office Andriy Yermak and the head of nuclear state operator Energoatom, Petro Kotin.

While in Zaporizhzhia, Zelenskyy also inspected military positions in the partially-occupied province and awarded soldiers with military honors. He also visited with wounded soldiers at city hospitals as well as an apartment building that Kyiv claims was hit by Russian forces last Wednesday, killing at least one person.

Elsewhere, two people were killed and 29 wounded Monday when Russian forces shelled the Ukrainian city of Sloviansk, in the partially occupied eastern Donetsk region, local officials said.

Video footage of the aftermath showed damaged residential buildings, debris in the streets and vehicles on fire.

Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy described the attack as “terrorism.”

Russia has denied targeting residential areas even though artillery and rocket strikes have hit Ukrainian apartment buildings and civilian infrastructure daily during the war.

The Sloviansk attack followed a typical pattern of long-range shelling adopted by the Kremlin’s forces, especially in recent months as the fighting became deadlocked during the bitterly cold winter months.

In the eastern Donetsk region, some 10 cities and villages were shelled by Russian forces over the previous 24 hours, Ukraine’s presidential office reported Monday.

On Monday morning, Russian missiles hit the city of Avdiivka, damaging residential buildings, a hotel and a courthouse, it said.

Avdiivka Mayor Vitali Barabash said utility companies are being evacuated from the frontline city, as it “resembles more and more a landscape from post-apocalyptic movies.”

Attacks also intensified in the partially occupied southeastern Zaporizhzhia region, where 14 settlements on the front line were shelled, authorities said.

In the partially occupied Kherson region, the Ukrainian-controlled part of the province was shelled 20 times by the Russian artillery and aviation, wounding four people, the presidential office said.

The mayor of the occupied city of Melitopol said several explosions shook the city Monday, damaging a building where Russian security forces have been quartered.

Mayor Ivan Fyodorov posted photos of smoke billowing over the area where the Russian barracks are located.

The Russian-installed authorities said “artillery shelling” of Melitopol partially destroyed a vocational school building, damaged several other buildings and wounded four people.

Meanwhile, Zelenskyy met in Kyiv with British actor Orlando Bloom, the head of Ukraine’s presidential office Andriy Yermak said Monday.

Bloom, who is also a UNICEF goodwill ambassador, arrived in the Ukrainian capital over the weekend and visited its suburb of Irpin.

During his meeting with Zelenskyy, Bloom said “he was struck by the courage and resilience of Ukrainians, who despite the war remain strong,” Yermak wrote.

Bloom “will support projects to provide humanitarian assistance and restore infrastructure, focused on ensuring the interests of Ukrainian children,” the official said.

Follow AP’s coverage of the war in Ukraine: https://apnews.com/hub/russia-ukraine

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Humza Yousaf’s win is celebrated by SNP’s opponents, says DAVID MADDOX | Politics | News

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Humza Yousaf’s win is celebrated by SNP’s opponents, says DAVID MADDOX | Politics | News

Almost 12 years ago I was having a cup of tea on the Parliamentary estate in Westminster with a promising young Labour MP from Glasgow called Anas Sarwar.

He was talking through the disastrous Scottish election result a few weeks earlier where Alex Salmond led the SNP to an improbable majority. The name of a newly elected SNP MSP seen as a future star came up – Humza Yousaf, also representing Glasgow. I said to Sarwar: “At some point, the two of you are going to be vying to be First Minister of Scotland.”

Today that Mystic Meg-like prediction came true with Mr Yousaf unveiled as the winner of the SNP and his main opponent in the 2026 Scottish Parliament election will be the very same Mr Sarwar, leader of the Scottish Labour Party.

But while the “SNP establishment” will be cheering the result and breathing huge sighs of relief, it is Labour’s Mr Sarwar who is the real winner today.

While he should not yet be measuring the new red tartan curtains for the First Minister’s Bute House residence in Edinburgh he will never have a better chance to restore Labour as the ruling party in Scotland and in doing so save the Union of the United Kingdom.

So why is this good news for Sarwar and to a large extent the Tories as well?

Essentially, the reason comes from the nickname one Scottish MP gave him – “Captain Calamity.”

Despite being seen as a future leader and rapidly promoted by Salmond and Nicola Sturgeon, Yousaf has been a catastrophe in every ministerial job he has held.

As Labour’s shadow Scottish Secretary Ian Murray said: “He is the Chris Grayling of Scottish politics. Everything he has touched in office has turned to sand.”

(For those who have forgotten Chris Grayling was for a long time regarded as the most happless cabinet minister in the Conservative government).

Another Unionist MP added: “He [Yousaf] has no mandate to be First Minister.”

While a Scottish Labbour source added: “And the winner of the SNP leadership election is…..Anas Sarwar and Keir Starmer!”

In Yousaf’s case, it was the fine for driving without insurance when he was transport minister.

As Justice Secretary, he accused Scotland of being “too white”.

As Health Secretary, he has overseen appalling NHS waiting times and the worst drug death in Scotland.

These are just tasters in a career which has embodied the ongoing failures of the SNP government in Scotland over 16 long years – failures which are finally catching up with them and were behind Sturgeon’s sudden departure.

The cheers in SNP headquarters will not be because they believe Yousaf can lead them to independence – but are more about jobs.

Yousaf became the SNP establishment candidate with almost every leading party member endorsing him.

Pen pushers, special advisors, campaign coordinators and all the hangers-on of the Sturgeon regime now have the man to continue her toxic legacy and save their jobs.

The SNP had chosen the Murrayfueld rugby ground to have a big ra-ra reception for their new leader.

But after weeks of bitter infighting, the splits in the party had been laid bare and the atmosphere was more funerial than joyous.

It also looked a bit pre-scripted with Yousaf reading his victory speech from a pre-prepared autocue. Some will think that maybe the result was already known.

As Lib Dem veteran MP Jamie Stone explained: “It could not have been more perfect. A divided SNP with a close result and Humza Yousaf as leader.”

Mr Stone represents a highland seat where the SNP are his main opponents.

It may be early to predict the end of the Nationalist domination in Scotland but today felt more like the beginning of the end.



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Lebanon changes unpopular move to delay daylight saving time

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Lebanon changes unpopular move to delay daylight saving time

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BEIRUT — Lebanon’s caretaker prime minister reversed an unpopular decision made by his office to delay the start of daylight saving time by a month, saying Monday the Cabinet decided to implement the change in two days.

Najib Mikati’s comments came after the government’s initial decision earlier this month was widely criticized around the country with many, including the country’s largest church, saying they will not abide by the decision.

“The new daylight saving time will start at midnight Wednesday,” Mikati said after a Cabinet meeting that only discussed the issue.

With some institutions implementing the change while others refused, many Lebanese found themselves in the position of juggling work and school schedules in different time zones — in a country that is just 88 kilometers (55 miles) at its widest point.

Last week, the government said it will delay the start of daylight saving time by a month until the end of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan. That led to mass confusion in a country already experiencing the worst economic and financial crisis in its modern history.

In some cases, the debate took on a sectarian nature, with many Christian politicians and institutions, including the small nation’s largest church, the Maronite Church, rejecting the move.

The small Mediterranean country normally sets its clocks forward an hour on the last Sunday in March, which aligns with most European countries. However, on Thursday, the government announced a decision by Mikati to push the start of daylight saving to April 21.

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Giants of journalism gather to say goodbye to Sir Bernard Ingham | UK | News

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Giants of journalism gather to say goodbye to Sir Bernard Ingham | UK | News

Sir Bernard, who died this month aged 90, was a political giant of the Thatcher era, a straight-talking Northerner and a journalist to his bones. He was a passionate advocate for Margaret Thatcher’s vision for Britain (earning the nickname “Thatcher’s Rottweiler”) and, for a boy brought up in the modest Yorkshire town of Hebden Bridge, he carried remarkable political clout.

As Express columnist and friend Leo McKinstry said: “At the peak of his remarkable career in the 1980s, he had more political influence than most Cabinet Ministers.”

Today fellow giants of political journalism attended Sir Bernard’s funeral at the church of St Mary the Virgin, in Bletchingley, in Surrey.

Sky News Chief political correspondent Jon Craig was joined by Press Association boss and former Express deputy editor Paul Potts and the Sun’s legendary political editor Trevor Kavanagh, among many others.

In an address Mr Kavanagh called Sir Bernard a “warm and kind man” and added: “He was the legendary voice of one of the most respected and influential prime ministers in the world. When Bernard spoke the world listened.

“But he loved journalism and journalists. He barked but he never bit.”

Fellow Downing St press officer Charles Anson added: “Mrs Thatcher trusted Bernard absolutely.

“He rarely minced his words and loved a good argument. He loved the cut and thrust of politics – he hated the idea of spin doctors but was a brilliant advocate of Mrs Thatcher’s approach to government – of getting things done.”

It fell to Sir Bernard’s son John, a Daily Express legend himself, to remind the congregation Sir Bernard was first and foremost a father and devoted family man.

He said: “He was larger than life and a force of nature. He was seen as Beelzebub in human form to some, but to me he was just my dad, and he was a great dad.

“These days if you have any level of success it has become fashionable to boast how awful your upbringing was… but I can’t do that.

“He was certainly a workaholic but whenever I needed him he was there.”

Sir Bernard was born in 1932 in Halifax and brought up in Hebden Bridge. His mum and dad were Labour supporters, and the young Sir Bernard even stood as a Labour councillor.

He became editor of the Hebden Bridge Times at just 19 – the start of a lifetime in and around journalism.

However, in 1967 he took a job as Whitehall press officer which would see him negotiate the tumultuous and heavily unionised 1970s.

Sir Bernard once said the militancy of the decade convinced him to take the job as Margaret Thatcher’s right hand man – where he became arguably the most influential press secretary in Whitehall history.

More recently Sir Bernard became a columnist for both Express.co.uk and the Yorkshire Post – whom he was still filing copy for almost until his death on February 24.



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Israel judicial reform protest live updates: Netanyahu under pressure amid general strike

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Israel judicial reform protest live updates: Netanyahu under pressure amid general strike

A general strike threatened to bring Israel to a standstill Monday as as growing fury at Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s plan to overhaul the country’s courts stoked nationwide backlash and threw the government into turmoil.

Israeli universities, workers’ unions, hospitals, malls and Israel’s national carrier, El Al, announced a general strike, and the international airport terminated outgoing flights indefinitely. Even diplomats abroad were set to join striking government workers. Tends of thousands of protesters flooded Jerusalem. Amid calls from across the government for Netanyahu to stand down, the business community and opposition, including from Israeli President Isaac Herzog and Netanyahu’s own longtime lawyer, local media outlets reported he would make a public statement Monday morning.

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‘I booked a family holiday instead of a honeymoon and now my fiancé is furious’ | US | News

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‘I booked a family holiday instead of a honeymoon and now my fiancé is furious’ | US | News

A man’s fiancée is fuming after he agreed for them to go on a vacation with family and friends instead of a honeymoon together. He claimed it was a longstanding family tradition to go on the trips and that nothing could beat the vacations they take together. But his fiancée, who has limited holiday left for the year, didn’t see it the same way.

Posting on Reddit, the man said she was furious he didn’t “shut down” the idea from the start. The man took to the popular sub-Reddit “Am I the A******?” to ask users what they thought of his decision.

“My family and family friends of ours go on vacation together every year. This has been a tradition since I was maybe 11 years old and I’m now 27. Each year, my parents and the other family’s parents alternate who plans and pays for the vacation. This year is our family friends’ turn,” the man said.

The couple are getting married in a few weeks time and haven’t planned their honeymoon which they wanted to take some time after the wedding.

The groom can get time off “whenever” he likes but his fiancée has limited holiday so he told his family and friends that he would likely have to miss this year’s get together.

But then, his family friend booked him a room. The Redditor wrote: “Last week, my ‘bonus dad’ came to me and told me he had booked a room for me and my girlfriend was more than welcome to come along too if she changed her mind, but that he was insistent on the family being together for the trip.

“Honestly, there’s nothing that can beat the vacations we take. The places are great and the company is even greater.”

His fiancée, however, was not happy and told him he should have known straight away to shut down the idea.

“I told my fiancée about this and she’s very angry I didn’t immediately shut it down. I told her that we weren’t required to constantly do family activities and this could easily serve as part one to our honeymoon,” he wrote. “We haven’t started planning so there’s no real plans to derail, and we can have our actual honeymoon as a first anniversary celebration since we weren’t planning on going right after our wedding anyway.”

Turning to Redditors to see if he was in the wrong, they gave him a resounding yes. The post has racked up hundreds of comments with many of the top comments claiming the original poster was indeed the bad guy.

READ MORE: Amazon’s 3-day sale is now on – top deals on electronics, home and fashion

One Redditor said: “You’re the a******. The correct response was ‘I don’t know, let me check with my fiancée first, since we haven’t set a date for the the honeymoon yet.’ You need to pick your fiancée (who IS your family now) over your natal family. If you can’t do that, don’t marry her, for her sake.”

Another added: “In all of this he only mentions the benefits of this holiday for him. HIS friends HIS family. While she’s the one with limited paid time off. You’re the a****** a honeymoon is meant for two.”

Others were even harsher in their replies, one user savaged the poster: “What is wrong with you??? I hope she dumps you. Go on vacation with your sister. Your wife can do better.”

The overwhelming majority of Redditors were in agreement that the poster was in the wrong, siding with his fiancée and labelling him the a******.

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Prince Harry in court for privacy suit against tabloid

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Prince Harry in court for privacy suit against tabloid

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LONDON — Prince Harry was in a London court Monday as the lawyer for a group of British tabloids prepared to ask a judge to toss out lawsuits by the prince, Elton John and several other celebrities who allege phone tapping and other invasions of privacy.

Harry’s presence at the High Court in London is a sign of the importance he attaches to the case, one of several lawsuits the Duke of Sussex has brought against the media. The hearing is expected to last four days.

The case alleges Associated Newspapers Ltd., which publishes titles including the Daily Mail, commissioned the “breaking and entry into private property,” engaging in unlawful acts that included hiring private investigators to bug homes and cars and record private phone conversations.

“They were the victim of numerous unlawful acts carried out by the defendant, or by those acting on the instructions of its newspapers, The Daily Mail and The Mail On Sunday,” attorney David Sherborne said in a court document.

Other plaintiffs include John’s husband, David Furnish, and actresses Liz Hurley and Sadie Frost, who was also in court. Harry sat near the rear of the court and took notes as attorneys discussed preliminary matters.

The allegations date back to 1993 and continue beyond 2018, Sherborne said.

The publisher said the claims are too old to be brought now and should also be thrown out because because they rely on information the newspapers turned over in confidentiality for a 2012 probe into media law breaking.

“It would be surprising indeed for any reasonably informed member of the public, let alone a figure in the public eye, to have been unaware of these matters,” attorney Adrian Beltrami said in writing.

Britain held a year-long inquiry into press ethics after revelations in 2011 that News of the World tabloid employees eavesdropped on the mobile phone voicemails of celebrities, politicians and a teenage murder victim.

Owner Rupert Murdoch shut down the newspaper amid a criminal investigation and public uproar. Several journalists were convicted, and Murdoch’s company paid millions in damages to dozens of hacking victims.

In the inquiry’s 2012 report, Lord Justice Brian Leveson said “outrageous” behavior by some in the press had “wreaked havoc with the lives of innocent people whose rights and liberties have been disdained.”

Judge Matthew Nicklin, who is hearing the current eavesdropping case, is also overseeing a separate libel lawsuit Harry brought against Associated Newspapers over an article about his quest for police protection when he and his family visit the U.K.

Harry, the younger son of King Charles III, and his wife, the former actress Meghan Markle, stepped down as working royals in 2020 and moved to the U.S., citing what they described as the unbearable intrusions and racist attitudes of the British media.

Harry has said he wants to make reforming the British media his life’s work. He fumes at the U.K. media throughout his memoir “Spare,” published in January. He blamed an overly aggressive press for the 1997 death of his mother, Princess Diana, and also accused the media of hounding Meghan.

The couple has turned to British courts to combat what they see as media mistreatment. In December 2021, Meghan won an invasion-of-privacy case against Associated Newspapers over the Mail on Sunday’s publication of a letter she wrote to her estranged father.

Harry is also suing the publisher of another tabloid, the Mirror, in a separate hacking suit.

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Crimea leader ‘creates own Wagner Group’ in bid to bolster Putin’s forces | World | News

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Crimea leader ‘creates own Wagner Group’ in bid to bolster Putin’s forces | World | News

The Kremlin-installed leader of Crimea has reportedly formed a pro-Russian mercenary group named “Convoy,” which was inspired by the notorious Wagner Group.

According to reports, the group has already been dispatched to occupied areas of southern Ukraine‘s Kherson region.

A member of the mercenary outfit has stated that although the organisation is owned by Aksyonov, all members are former Wagner employees.

The group was seen training in a forest and learning how to dig trenches and place landmines in a Russia-24 TV broadcast.

The Convoy’s Telegram account was launched in November and features a lot of Russian Orthodox imagery and icons, as well as references to Ukrainians being “Satanists.”

According to Russian opposition media, the Convoy’s leader is Konstantin Pikalov, a former Wagner officer in Madagascar and the Central African Republic.

We’ll be bringing you the very latest updates, pictures and video on this breaking news story.

For the latest news and breaking news visit: /news

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Burkina Faso suspends France 24 for interview with jihadi

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Burkina Faso suspends France 24 for interview with jihadi

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DAKAR, Senegal — Burkina Faso’s military junta has suspended French broadcaster, France 24, for interviewing a top jihadi rebel, a government spokesman announced Monday.

The broadcasting of France 24’s programs will be blocked throughout Burkina Faso because of an interview the outlet did with the leader of an al-Qaida aligned group, Jean-Emmanuel Ouedraogo said in a statement.

“It is with regret that the government discovered two weeks ago an interview with the ‘chief of al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb’ on France 24, part of the France Medias Monde group. Without contesting the freedom of the channel’s editorial choices, the government nevertheless questions the ethics that govern the professional practice of journalism on France 24,” he said.

By describing the views of the head of the rebel group, France 24 had acted as a communication agency for the jihadis and gave them space to legitimize their actions, he said.

On March 6, France 24 discussed on air, the exclusive interview it had conducted with Algerian Abu Obeida Youssef al-Aanabi, the leader of AQIM, an umbrella group of Islamic extremist groups operating in the Sahel region, the vast, semi-arid expanse below the Sahara Desert. However, France 24 decided not to broadcast it, Wassim Nasr, the journalist who did the interview told The Associated Press.

In the interview, which took one year to arrange, the only mention of Burkina Faso was to challenge the al-Qaida chief about taking responsibility for an attack in the town of Solhan in the Sahel region that killed at least 160 people in June 2021, said Nasr.

“We try to talk to all parties. This is what journalism is about,” he said.

Jihadi fighters linked al-Qaida and the Islamic State group have been waging a violent insurgency in Burkina Faso for seven years, that’s killed thousands and displaced nearly 2 million people. The violence has destabilized and divided the once peaceful West African country leading to two coups last year. Since the second coup when Capt. Ibrahim Traore seized power in September, civic freedoms have shrunk, say rights groups and residents.

The decision by Burkina Faso’s junta not to allow the broadcasts of France 24 comes less than four months after the government suspended French broadcaster Radio France Internationale for having relayed an “intimidation message” attributed to a “terrorist,” according to a statement from the junta.

Earlier this month, Mathieu Pellerin, the Sahel consultant for the International Crisis Group, was arrested and detained for two days by authorities and questioned about his work, said Murithi Mutiga, the group’s Africa program director. It was the first time one of the group’s specialists had been detained in Burkina Faso in a decade of working there, he said.

In December the government expelled the top U.N. official in the country and weeks later ordered France to recall its ambassador.

“The suspension of France 24 shows how far authorities in Burkina Faso can go in clearly violating freedom of information and the right of the country’s people to access news freely,” said Sadibou Marong, head of the sub-Saharan Africa office for Reporters Without Borders.

“The security crisis in Burkina Faso should not be used as an excuse to prevent journalists from covering the crisis in a responsible and independent manner,” he said. “We call on the authorities to reconsider their decision in the name of the public’s right to pluralistic reporting.”

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Prince Harry’s UK return raises hope for Coronation as he braves ‘hostile envirronment’ | Royal | News

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Prince Harry’s UK return raises hope for Coronation as he braves ‘hostile envirronment’ | Royal | News

surprised royal watchers by arriving at the High Court in London on Monday morning for a preliminary hearing of a privacy case. Royal commentator Afua Hagan said his attendance in person shows how strongly the Duke of Sussex feels about the case and that his return to the UK is “a good sign” he will come to the in May.

She added: “It shows how important the case is to him, the strength of feeling about this.”

Ms Hagan noted that throughout his memoir Spare and recent Netflix docu-series Harry spoke of his determination to improve how the media operates – and his attendance at the hearing shows just how important that mission is to him.

She added that Harry has braved returning to the UK in the face of a “hostile environment”, in a nod to his dismal popularity ratings in the wake of his book and promotional interviews.

But that’s not the only significance of him making the trip all the way from California. The expert noted that Harry could use the trip to meet with his family, most notably his father whose scheduled trip to France was postponed.

READ MORE: Harry and Meghan can start ‘new narrative’ at Coronation, says expert

“It’s a nice surprise that he’s here and there could be a potential meeting with his dad,” she said. “He might discuss details of the Coronation that could pave the way to him and possibly Meghan being there as well.”

Ms Hagan later added: “He could potentially meet with the King, I hope that he does and this could pave the way for them being at the Coronation.

“I think it does bode well for the Coronation that he is here. He didn’t have to come he could have appeared remotely.”

The Duke and Duchess of Sussex have been invited to the Coronation but have yet to confirm whether they will attend it.

However, reports suggest the King has told his youngest son that “he is busy” and will be unable to meet with him while he’s in London. This is despite Harry reaching out to the monarch, according to the Telegraph.

The King had been due to be on his first state visit to France today, but the trip was postponed at the last minute because of the violent protests being waged in the capital.

Prince William is also unlikely to meet with his brother this week, as he is understood to have gone on holiday with his wife and three children, as their school in Ascot broke up for the Easter holidays on Friday.



*This story has not been edited by The Infallible staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.