The Duke of Sussex has claimed the King will not speak to him and he does not know ‘how much longer my father has’ as he spoke of his hopes for a ‘reconciliation’ with his family.

In a BBC television interview after losing the latest round in his court battle over his security in the UK, Harry, 40, said: ‘this, at the heart of it, is a family dispute’.

When asked if Charles had been approached to use his influence in Harry’s legal problems, the duke appeared to imply the King was a hindrance, a comment likely to deepen the rift with his father and his brother, the Prince of Wales.

He added he feared other members of his family ‘will never forgive him’.

Harry criticises Ravec’s ‘reckless action’ hours after bombshell BBC interview

Prince Harry said he had ‘uncovered shocking truths’ as he took a blistering swipe against those responsible for downgrading his security status just hours after losing his high-profile court battle to reinstate police protection when in the UK.

Harry appeared to take aim at his father, King Charles III and said his ‘jaw dropped’ when he discovered the Royal Household sat on the ‘secretive’ committee.

He insinuated that more could have been done by the monarch, as well as the King’s private secretary Sir Clive Alderton, who had a position on Ravec.

He bolstered that claim just hours later by issuing a statement again taking aim at Ravec’s decision, which he described as ‘a reckless action’ that ‘knowingly put me and my family in harm’s way.’

Harry makes ‘dark’ reference to Diana’s death in shocking interview

Prince Harry chillingly insinuated his downgraded security status could leave him and his family to suffer the same fate as the late Princess Diana, who died in a fatal car crash in Paris in 1997.

Speaking about his fears for himself, wife Meghan and their children, Prince Archie and Princess Lilibet, he declared: ‘I don’t want history to repeat itself. Through the [court] process, I have discovered that some people want history to repeat itself.’

Harry yesterday raged that ‘the other side’ in the court case had ‘won in keeping me unsafe’, as England’s second most senior judge slapped down his Appeal Court bid to reinstate his police bodyguards when in the UK.

He added: ‘I’m sure that some people out there, probably most likely the people that wish me harm, consider this a huge win.’

Queen Elizabeth would be ‘truly horrified’ by Harry’s comments, insiders claim

The late Queen Elizabeth would be ‘horrified’ by Prince Harry’s BBC interview, a royal insider has claimed today.

The source told ITV today that the Duke’s ‘beloved grandmother’ would have been ‘truly horrified’, especially about his comments about King Charles’ health.

Another insider added: ‘The remarks about his illness were in particularly poor taste and of course suggest something entirely contrary to the reality.’

Prince Harry said after yesterday’s legal ruling that it is ‘impossible’ to bring his wife and his children back to Britain.

Harry in his bombshell BBC interview said that he still loved the UK ‘despite what some people in that country have done’ and added that it was ‘really quite sad that I won’t be able to show my children my homeland’.

Harry said: ‘The only time I have come back to the UK is sadly for funerals or court cases, and with the odd charitable function where I can in-between that, and I put myself at risk for that, but I will continue on with a life of public service, and I will always support the charities and the people who mean so much to me.

‘I can’t see a world in which I will be bringing my wife and children back to the UK at this point and the things they are going to miss is everything. I love my country and always have done…despite what some people in that country have done.

‘So I miss the UK. I miss parts of the UK. Of course I do. I think it’s really quite sad that I won’t be able to show my children my homeland.’

King Charles and Prince William ‘don’t trust’ Harry

Ex-BBC royal correspondent Jennie Bond writes in the Daily Express that Harry ‘says he can only come back to the UK with his family if he is invited, because then he would get the security he believes he needs’.

She continues: ‘But this bombshell of an interview is unlikely to bring that invitation any closer. And that’s because at the root of the rift is the question of trust.

‘Harry’s father and brother do not trust Harry to keep conversations private. And this loudspeaker of a diatribe against them is not going to make them change their minds.’

Prince Harry: ‘I don’t know how much longer my father has… I would love to reconcile’

The health of the King, who is being treated for cancer, was highlighted by his son in his interview last night, as he said: ‘And I said, life is precious. I don’t know how much longer my father has, he, he won’t speak to me because of this security stuff, but it would be nice to reconcile.’

Harry, who appeared emotional and close to tears through much of the interview, offered an olive branch, saying he could ‘forgive my family’s involvement’, naming Charles, the Prince of Wales and his stepmother, the Queen, in events since he began dating his wife Meghan in 2016.

He added: ‘But you know, I would love reconciliation with my family,’ and said there was ‘no point in continuing to fight anymore.’

What does Buckingham Palace say?

After the legal result yesterday, Buckingham Palace took the unusal step of putting out a public statement.

It’s very rare for the Palace to comment on matters such as these – so it was a significant moment, coinciding with Prince Harry revealing he would like to make ameds with his family.

A Palace spokesperson said last night: ‘All of these issues have been examined repeatedly and meticulously by the courts, with the same conclusion reached on each occasion.’

Harry to ‘write to Home Secretary’ and thinks PM should step in over security

Prince Harry has called on the Home Secretary to step in and review the body which authorises protection for senior royals – as he issued a fresh statement on his failed bid for security in the UK.

After the court’s decision on Friday, the 40-year-old said he would ask Yvette Cooper to ‘look at this very, very carefully’, and warned that the royal family’s power over security means it ‘can be used to control’ family members.

When asked whether Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer should ‘step in’, Harry told the BBC: ‘I think that based on the judgment that the court has put out today, it clearly states that Ravec are not constrained by law.

‘Again, I wish somebody had said that from the beginning.’

He continued: ‘Yes, I would ask the Prime Minister to step in.’

Prince Harry’s bombshell interview where he dished out the details of his strained relationship with his father is a ‘sad and sorry saga’, a royal expert has said.

The Duke of Sussex last night launched a blistering attack on King Charles, saying he ‘won’t speak to me’ and that he ‘doesn’t know how much longer he has left’.

He also revealed he will not bring his wife or children back to the UK – and said he had had ‘so many disagreements’ with his family, some of whom ‘may never forgive’ him for writing a book.

It comes as a royal insider claimed that while Harry may want to repair the relationship with his family, Charles is still frustrated and upset with his son.

A friend of the King said it would have been ‘constitutionally improper’ for him to intervene in the court case.

What is this latest court dispute about?

Harry’s level of security changed in 2020 when he and Meghan stepped down as working royals and moved to California for financial and personal freedom.

He has since argued the royal family and officials hoped his realisation of the increased safety risk ‘would force us to come back’.

The duke lost a Court of Appeal challenge over his security arrangements while in the UK and said in the TV interview he ‘can’t see a world in which I would be bringing my wife and children back to the UK’.

He failed in his appeal against the dismissal of his High Court claim against the Home Office, over the decision of the Executive Committee for the Protection of Royalty and Public Figures (Ravec) that he should receive a different degree of protection when in the UK.

He has been fighting the ruling ever since, but suffered another loss on Friday.

Welcome to our live blog

Good morning and welcome to MailOnline’s live blog following all the latest reaction after Prince Harry’s interiew with the BBC.

Yesterday he lost the latest leg of a legal battle concerning the security he and his family are offered in the UK at the High Court.

He then spoke to the BBC and said he is keen for rapprochement with his family – but that his father ‘won’t speak ton him’ and he fears other relativws will ‘never forgive him’.

Follow along for all the latest news, pictures and updates as we get them.

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