Prince Harry hit with strict rules for reconciliation

Prince Harry has just been hit with some major regulations that he’s been tasked with keeping in mind should rehabilitation be his desire

By
Hiba Anjum
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Prince Harry handed strict code of conduct for rehabilitation
Prince Harry handed strict code of conduct for rehabilitation

Prince Harry has been handed strict points of reflection, in case any hope for reconciliation is still on his mind.

Broadcaster Emily Andrews was the one to deliver her thoughts first, and she got candid with The Mirror almost immediately.

“I’d like to see Harry back. If I’m being honest,” she began by saying.

In her eyes, a return to the UK “I think it would be good for him,” she added. “If he came back and did some really good public service, I think we’d all be reminded what a great bloke he is and how much we do really like him.”

For those unversed, this revelation has come shortly after Prince Harry made his last public appearance, which was was the BBC.

There he touched on his dissatisfaction with the government’s decision to reject his security plea despite facing threats on a daily due to his birth right.

Even Politician and journalist Ann Widdecombe chimed in and warned that for any kind of rehabilitation with the press at least, Prince Harry would need to find “something useful to do.”

Overall, “if he finds a direction to his life that commands respect, that could cause the press and Harry to reconcile,” she told the outlet.

A similar sentiment was echoed by royal commentator the Countess of Sandwich, Julie Montagu but she noted two main things that require changing for any positive workaround.

“The public wants to forgive, but it needs to start with Harry,” she started noted.

Number one would be to “stop any time of interview where you’re mentioning any member of your family - end of story.”

Similarly number two would be to realize that “if you really want to make that reconciliation, whether that’s private or public, start that.”

Only “once that reconciliation begins, then the public can be made aware of that,” she added in the end.