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Entertainment

Prince Harry, Meghan mark Archie's first birthday with book reading for COVID-19 benefit

Agence France-Presse
Prince Harry, Meghan mark Archie's first birthday with book reading for COVID-19 benefit
This handout still image released on May 6, 2020, on the @SaveChildrenUK Instagram account of the charity Save the Children, and taken from a video filmed in California, US, by Britain's Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex, shows Meghan, Duchess of Sussex reading from the book Duck! Rabbit! to their son Archie, on his first birthday.
AFP / Save the Children / The Duke and Duchess of Sussex

CALIFORNIA — Archie, son of Britain's Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex, and Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, marked his first birthday on May 6 in California, United States.

A video released on May 6 on the Save Children UK Instagram account of the charity Save the Children shows Meghan reading from the book "Duck! Rabbit!" to Archie. The video was taken from a video filmed in California.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

"Duck! Rabbit!" with Meghan, The Duchess of Sussex (and Harry, The Duke of Sussex behind the camera), read to their son Archie for his 1st birthday. Happy Birthday, Archie! . Thank you #DuchessMeghan for helping us to raise urgent funds for our coronavirus appeal by reading "Duck! Rabbit" by @akrfoundation, illustrated by @tlichtenheld (published by @chroniclekidsbooks). . As the world grapples with the coronavirus pandemic, children’s lives are being turned upside down. By donating to Save with Stories, you can support the most vulnerable families in the UK and around the world by helping to provide early learning packs, supermarket vouchers, essential household items and virus protection. . Please donate today by visiting our website. Link in bio. . Or you can text STORIES to 70008 to give a one-off donation of £5. . Together, we can help families get through this. . You can only donate via text from a UK mobile. You’ll be billed £5 plus standard rate text message. We receive 100% of your donation. By texting STORIES you agree to calls about fundraising appeals, campaigns, events and other ways to support. Include NO PHONE to opt out of calls. Queries? 02070126400. Read our Privacy Policy savethechildren.org.uk/privacy The Save the Children Fund is a charity registered in England and Wales (213890) and Scotland (SC039570) . #SaveWithStoriesUK #SaveWithStories #GrowingThroughThis

A post shared by Save The Children UK (@savechildrenuk) on

"Meghan, The Duchess of Sussex reads 'Duck! Rabbit!' for Archie's birthday "Duck! Rabbit!" with Meghan, The Duchess of Sussex (and Harry, The Duke of Sussex behind the camera), read to their son Archie for his 1st birthday. Happy Birthday, Archie!" the charity said in the video's caption.

The Duke and Duchess released the video to support Save the Children's Save With Stories initiative, which is aimed at helping children hardest hit by the novel coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) crisis in the United Kingdom and around the world.

"Thank you #DuchessMeghan for helping us to raise urgent funds for our coronavirus appeal by reading 'Duck! Rabbit' by @akrfoundation, illustrated by @tlichtenheld (published by @chroniclekidsbooks). As the world grapples with the coronavirus pandemic, children’s lives are being turned upside down. By donating to Save with Stories, you can support the most vulnerable families in the UK and around the world by helping to provide early learning packs, supermarket vouchers, essential household items and virus protection. Please donate today by visiting our website," the charity urged the video's viewers.

Last May 1, a London judge struck out elements of the Duchess of Sussex's high profile claim against a tabloid newspaper group for publishing a letter she wrote to her estranged father.

The US one-time actress, who with her husband Prince Harry is waging an increasingly public war with some media outlets, is suing Associated Newspapers, which owns the weekly Mail on Sunday, Daily Mail and MailOnline.

She is claiming the news group breached her privacy, her data protection rights and copyright when, in February 2019, it printed extracts of correspondence the previous year to her father, Thomas.

A preliminary hearing in the case, held remotely last Friday at the High Court of England and Wales because of coronavirus restrictions, saw lawyers for Associated Newspapers apply to strike out parts of her claim.

In a summary of his judgement on the application, which sought to reject three different bases for the claim, judge Mark Warby ruled in the paper's favor. 

"The Court agrees that all three categories of allegation should be struck out," he wrote in his ruling.

Meghan alleged that reporters had acted "dishonestly and in bad faith," and "deliberately dug up or stirred conflict" between her and her dad, according to the judgement.

She claimed they had an "obvious agenda of publishing intrusive or offensive stories" which were "intended to portray her in a false and damaging light."

The duchess also argued that the only purpose of publication was "satisfying a curiosity" about her private life that the newspapers had generated.

Associated Newspapers denies wrongdoing, and maintains publication was in the public interest and on freedom of expression grounds.

They argued her specific claims were irrelevant in law or improperly argued and should be excluded.

Warby said Meghan's lawyers could later apply to make amendments to their case, as long as they complied with "the applicable law and principles."

No date has been set for any further hearing.

Meghan's lawyers Schillings said in a statement that "core elements" of her case had not changed despite the ruling.

"The duchess' rights were violated; the legal boundaries around privacy were crossed," it added. 

Meghan's fraught relationship with her father made headlines in the run-up to her wedding to Queen Elizabeth II's grandson in May 2018.

Harry has accused sections of the media of waging a "ruthless campaign" against his wife, likening it to the treatment of his mother, Diana, princess of Wales, during her lifetime.

She was killed in a high-speed car crash in Paris in August 1997 while being pursued by paparazzi photographers.

Harry and Meghan, who have quit frontline royal duties and moved to North America, last week said they would no longer cooperate with four major UK newspapers, including the Daily Mail, accusing them of "distorted, false and invasive" reporting.

The prince has separately brought court action against another news organisation for allegedly intercepting voice messages.

vuukle comment

MEGHAN MARKLE

NOVEL CORONAVIRUS

PRINCE HARRY

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