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Victim Prince Harry accused of very thing he & Meghan Markle famously levelled at Royals in delicious twist of irony

Published on March 30, 2025 at 07:09 PM

WELL, well, well — pot, meet kettle.

In a rather delicious twist of irony, Prince Harry has found himself embroiled in a row over bullying allegations, the very charge he and his wife, Meghan Markle, famously levelled against the Royal Family.

Prince Harry, Alix Lebec, and Dr. Sophie Chandauka participating in a panel discussion.
Prince Harry has found himself embroiled in a row over bullying allegations made by Dr Sophie Chandauka, pictured
Sophie Chandauka, chairwoman of the Sentebale board, on Sky News.
Dr Sophie Chandauka, the chairwoman of the Sentebale board appearing on Sky News’s Sunday Morning With Trevor Phillips
Prince Harry and Meghan, Duchess of Sussex with polo teams at the Royal Salute Polo Challenge.
Harry, Meghan, and Dr Chandauka at the Royal Salute Polo Challenge in Wellington, Florida, last year

Harry will no doubt be reeling—especially because he's modelled himself as the ultimate victim and made a fortune doing it.

The saga began last week when Prince Harry stepped down as patron of Sentebale, the charity he co-founded nearly two decades ago in memory of his mother, Princess Diana.

The organisation, which supports orphans and vulnerable children with HIV/AIDS in Lesotho and Botswana, now finds itself in the limelight for all the wrong reasons.

This shift occurred after the charity’s chair, Dr Sophie Chandauka, threw down a heavy gauntlet by levelling serious accusations against it.

Dr Sophie alleges that for months, Harry tried to eject her from her position using tactics she describes as “bullying, harassment, and intimidation”;—ouch!

Adding to the drama, Chandauka took the extraordinary step of reporting the charity to the Charity Commission.

Her allegations? A litany of governance failures: poor management, abuse of power, bullying, harassment, misogyny, and a cover-up.

This does not exactly paint the picture of the peaceful, community-led development Sentebale advocates for.

It’s hard to miss the irony here.

We have Prince Harry, who has made a substantial part of his post-royal career (and fortune) by claiming to be a victim of similar mistreatment.

He and Meghan have secured lucrative deals speaking out against the alleged injustices they faced while part of the Royal Family, including a reported $100 million deal with Netflix and a headline-making interview with Oprah. Yet, here he is, accused of similar—if not identical—behaviour.

Sophie’s narrative doesn't stop at boardroom bullying.

At a charity polo event, Meghan's unexpected appearance supposedly threw the event into chaos, culminating in an awkward shuffle on stage that left Chandauka in an unenviable position.

According to Chandauka, Harry even asked her to issue a statement in support of Meghan post-chaos, a request she declined, asserting that the charity could not be an extension of the Sussexes' PR machine.

What’s more, when Prince Harry's efforts to remove Chandauka via a vote failed due to legal challenges, he allegedly tried to sabotage the charity.

This included a suspicious release of news to the press, supposedly authorised by Harry, which only added fuel to the firestorm already engulfing the charity and its governance.

Prince Harry and Meghan Markle sitting together.
Harry and Meghan have also undertaken other charity work together with The Archewell Foundation

You simply couldn’t make it up. The Duke of Sussex, having departed from royal duties partly due to allegations of mistreatment and bullying within the Royal Family, now faces similar accusations in his own charitable organisation.

It appears that Harry's dramatic exit from royal life was not so much an escape from the tribulations of royalty but rather a prelude to similar strife in his philanthropic endeavours.

Dr. Chandauka, despite her criticisms, praised Harry as an individual, noting his commitment when she asked him to visit Africa for the first time in five years.

Yet, the undercurrents of tension between the UK staff and those in Lesotho, as she described, suggest deeper issues of power and control, hinting at a discord that echoes the very disputes Harry aimed to leave behind.

As this royal saga unfolds, you can’t help but notice the cyclical nature of conflict and controversy surrounding Prince Harry. It’s like clockwork.

What began as a quest for freedom and fairness seems to have spiralled into a replication of the very dynamics he sought to escape.

Echoes of old disputes

Whether these allegations hold true or not, they have undoubtedly cast a shadow over Harry's image as a reformer and advocate for fairness.

Reflecting on the journey from Buckingham Palace to the boardrooms of Sentebale, it's apparent that escaping royal drama is not as simple as stepping down and moving away.

The issue, it seems, is the Sussexes themselves. These problems keep following them around like flies on rotting fruit.

In this theatrical twist, Prince Harry and Meghan Markle are no longer just narrators of their own story but have become characters in a larger narrative about power, privilege, and the complexities of public life.

‘Doing good’ (as the Sussexes keep bleating on about) is about more than just noble intentions.

You have to turn up, do the work, and admit when you make mistakes.

I find it astonishing that he hadn’t been to sub-Saharan Africa for over five years, even though he had set up a charity there almost 20 years ago.

Sentebale employs over 500 people. Can the prince even name up to 10% of them?

Admit mistakes

Ultimately, while I feel sorry for Prince Harry, if you’re going to claim to be a victim of bullying, you better make sure that you have your house in order.

This whole saga distracts from the good work that Sentebale does, which is a regrettable consequence. Harry made his own bed, and now he has to lie in it.

I hope he does the right thing and realises that sometimes, you have to put your ego aside for the greater good.

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