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Why leaving his own charity will matter so much to Prince Harry

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It was Sunday, 19 January 2020.

All attempts to negotiate a new role for the Duke and Duchess of Sussex within the royal family had failed, and Harry and Meghan were about to head off to a new life in the United States.

Prince Harry made one final speech about how he was feeling.

He delivered it at a dinner for his beloved Sentebale charity.

This was a safe space for him. Amongst charity workers, donors and friends, he spoke of the love and happiness he had found with Meghan, of honouring his mother’s legacy, and described his “sadness” at leaving the UK.

“Together, you have given me an education about living, and this role has taught me more about what is right and just than I could ever have imagined,” he told dinner guests.

“We are taking a leap of faith, so thank you for giving me the courage to take this next step.”

Sentebale had been part of Prince Harry’s world for his entire adult life. It had ridden the storm of family fallout and leaving royal life behind.

He first visited Lesotho, the landlocked mountain kingdom in southern Africa, when he was 19, in 2004. He’d just left Eton and was on a gap year before his military training at Sandhurst.

It was a formative time for Harry.

What he saw during his gap year prompted him to set up the charity two years later.

It would support children who had lost parents to HIV and Aids.

And then there is the Diana factor. Sentebale means “forget-me-not” in Sesotho, the language of Lesotho.

Back at that Sentebale dinner in 2020, he told guests: “When I lost my mum… you took me under your wing. You looked out for me for so long.”

The connection to Diana, Princess of Wales, is an important personal part of the Sentebale story.

Getty Images Prince Seeiso of Lesotho and Prince Harry at a Sentebale event in Maseru, Lesotho in 2024.
Harry and Prince Seeiso of Lesotho became personal friends through their work with the charity

His joint founder, Prince Seeiso of Lesotho, had also lost his mother. They were both motivated by a sense of loss. Remembering their mothers drove much of what they did over the past two decades.

Prince Seeiso became a personal friend of Harry. Seeiso was a guest at his wedding in Windsor in 2018. He’d also been at the wedding of the Prince and Princess of Wales at Westminster Abbey seven years earlier.

This makes their joint decision to walk away from Sentebale all the more powerful.

Prince Harry’s move to the US has impacted his ability to be hands-on with some of his charity work. But his team in California say he remains a strong supporter of them all and plays an active part in what they do.

He last visited Lesotho in 2024 and, with Prince Seeiso, saw the latest work the charity was doing. His commitment to the charity would “never falter”, he said.

But, for now, Prince Harry has walked away in what has clearly been a catastrophic breakdown in the trustees’ relationship with the chair of the board.

There has been a personal fallout, a wrangle over the charity’s future direction, and broken relationships with damaging accusations being made.

Prince Harry has been here before.

Taken From BBC News

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cx2xeyn0lvvo

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Executive Board of UNESCO being held in Paris from 7-17 April 2025.

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Paris ( Imran Y. CHOUDHRY):- The 221st session of the Executive Board of UNESCO started in UNESCO Headquarter in Paris. Composed of 58 Member States, the Executive Board meets twice a year and is the main policy-making body of the Organization.

Permanent Delegate of Pakistan to UNESCO, Ambassador Mumtaz Zahra Baloch addressed the plenary session of the 221st session of the Executive Board of UNESCO.

In the Executive Board meeting, Ambassador Madam Mumtaz Zahra Baloch speak some important points:

  • Reaffirmed Pakistan’s commitment to a stronger and more effective UNESCO to meet today’s challenges.
  • Emphasized the need for a realistic and sustainable budget to deliver on its strategic priorities in education, science, culture, and communication.
  • Urged strategic rationalization in the structure and work of the organization; enhancing synergies, and reducing duplication and overlapping.

• Called on UNESCO to foster scientific collaboration to address common challenges; promote democratization of scientific progress and innovation; and insulate scientific advancement from artificial barriers and strategic competition.

  • Appreciated the dedication and commitment of the UNESCO staff and underlined the need for transparency and accountability.

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Chris Mason: UK relief but not delight at Trump tariffs

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Office lights in some corners of Westminster were on much later than usual last night.

Why? Because ministers and officials, just like so many others, were watching the telly to see what President Trump would have to say, the Business Secretary Jonathan Reynolds among them.

The president, brandishing a giant rectangular piece of card packed with the new tariff increases, unleashing waves of anxiety across factory floors, boardrooms and government ministries the world over.

Folk in government in the UK had picked up a sense of the mood music – a sense that the UK was “in the good camp rather than the bad camp” as one figure put it to me – but they had no idea in advance precisely what that would mean.

We now do know what it means.

I detect a sense of relief among ministers, but make no mistake they are not delighted – the tariffs imposed on the UK will have significant effects, and the tariffs on the UK’s trading partners will have a profound impact on jobs, industries and global trading flows in the weeks, months and years to come.

It will be “hugely disruptive,” as one government source put it.

There is an acute awareness in particular about the impact on the car industry.

Negotiations with America over a trade deal continue.

I am told a team of four UK negotiators are in “pretty intensive” conversation with their American counterparts – talking remotely, but willing to head to Washington if signing a deal appears imminent.

Let’s see.

Those on the UK side characterise the discussions as “more like a corporate conversation than a trade negotiation”, putting that down to the personnel, outlook and biographies of plenty in the Trump administration.

The other point being seized upon at Westminster, in particular by the Conservatives, is the difference between how the UK is being treated compared to the European Union – with plenty pointing to it as a dividend of Brexit.

The Liberal Democrats, by contrast, think the UK should work with Commonwealth and European allies to stand up to President Trump and impose retaliatory tariffs “if necessary”.

The Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer is meeting affected businesses on Thursday and the business secretary will address the Commons.

The next chapter of this economic revolution begins now, with how the world reacts, in rhetoric and retaliation.

This in itself will have a huge impact.

Whether, how and when some choose to respond will have economic and political consequences at home and abroad.

The global story of Donald Trump’s tariffs is only just beginning.

Taken From BBC News

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cn05d987x9ro

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UK to keep pushing for deal after Trump imposes 10% tariff

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The government will keep pushing for a deal to avoid a “trade war” after US President Donald Trump imposed new tariffs globally, the Business Secretary Jonathan Reynolds has said.

Trump announced fresh levies on goods coming into his country including 10% on all UK imports and 20% on those from the European Union.

The UK has spent weeks working on a trade deal with the US to avoid the full impact of the level of tariffs introduced on countries such as Canada and China.

A Downing Street source said the UK’s lower tariff “vindicates” the government’s plans, because “the difference between 10% and 20% is thousands of jobs”.

Responding to the new tariffs, Reynolds said the government remained “fully focused” on negotiating a deal with the US that would strengthen their “balanced trading relationship”.

“We have a range of tools at our disposal and we will not hesitate to act,” he said.

The US plan sets a baseline tariff on all imports of at least 10%, with items from countries that the White House described as the “worst offenders” facing far higher rates for what Trump said was payback for unfair trade policies.

His move breaks with decades of US policy embracing free trade. Analysts said it was likely to lead to higher prices in the US and slower growth around the world.

The government’s official forecaster estimates a worst-case scenario trade war could reduce UK economic growth by 1% and wipe out the £9.9bn of economic headroom Chancellor Rachel Reeves gave herself at last week’s Spring Statement.

A Downing Street source told the BBC: “We don’t want any tariffs at all, but a lower levy than others vindicates our approach. It matters because the difference between 10% and 20% is thousands of jobs.

“We will keep negotiating, keep cool and keep calm,” the source said, adding: “Tomorrow we will continue with that work.”

The government will hold a series of talks with affected businesses on Thursday to provide support and discuss a response.

Sebastian Gorka, an adviser to Trump, suggested the UK’s approach had seen it receive a “special rate” on tariffs.

“After Brexit, you have reaffirmed your independence and I think that is been proven today by the special rate that has been afforded to the UK,” he told the BBC’s Newsnight, adding that the “exempted rate” could be “improved” in the future.

Diplomatic efforts are still ongoing. As part of the efforts to get a deal, Lord Mandelson, the UK ambassador, has had meetings in the White House with Vice-President JD Vance and Susie Wiles, the president’s chief of staff.

For the moment, the UK will not be “jumping into a trade war” with retaliatory tariffs, Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer said – a repeat of the response to Trump’s earlier tariffs on steel and aluminium.

Sir Keir told his cabinet this week he was “keeping all options on the table” to respond to the tariffs, which economists have warned could damage the UK economy and increase the cost of living.

Inside government officials hope that Wednesday’s announcement sets a “ceiling” on negotiations, not the final price, and can be talked down.

The government’s approach has been backed in some of the early responses from the UK business sector.

The Confederation of British Industry (CBI) has said the government “has rightfully tried to negotiate a carve-out” and that businesses need a “measured and proportionate approach”.

But Conservative shadow trade secretary Andrew Griffith accused Labour of “failing to negotiate with President Trump’s team” in time.

“Sadly, it is British businesses and workers who will pay the price for Labour’s failure,” he said.

“The silver lining is that Brexit – which Labour ministers voted against no less than 48 times – means that we face far lower tariffs than the EU: a Brexit dividend that will have protected thousands of British jobs and businesses.”

In contrast, the Lib Dems urged the government to consider using “retaliatory tariffs where necessary” and form a “coalition of the willing against Trump’s tariffs” with other countries.

Government sources believe talks between the US and the UK have made good progress, but have been derailed by Trump’s public comments.

At different times, statements by Trump about his tariffs are said to have differed from what his negotiating team had previously understood his position to be.

The deal would be broader than just reducing tariffs, focusing on technology, but also covering elements of trade in goods and services as well as agriculture – a controversial area in previous unsuccessful US-UK trade talks.

Chancellor Rachel Reeves has suggested the UK could change its taxes on big tech firms as part of a deal to overturn US tariffs.

The digital services tax, introduced in 2020, imposes a 2% levy on tech firms, including big US firms such as Amazon, bringing in about £800m in tax per year.

The UK motoring industry, also hit with an additional 25% tax on all car imports to the US announced this week, called the tariffs “deeply disappointing”.

Mike Hawes, chief executive of the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders, said the US announcement was “yet another challenge to a sector already facing multiple headwinds”.

Taken From BBC News

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cn05dge02vzo

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