Harry and Will’s heated Meghan call

OSTN Staff

A new documentary will claim that an explosive argument erupted between the royal brothers during the conversation, The Sun reports.The well-sourced documentary, Red Line: William and Harry, the Enemy Brothers, alleges Harry reportedly refused to hear William’s concerns and suddenly hung up the phone – choosing to defend his wife and not give any credence to witness statements.The French TV series – due to come out next week – alleges that the abrupt end to the phone call enraged Wills and saw him shunned by his younger brother.The Duke of Cambridge then raced furiously towards Kensington Palace to confront Harry, royal sources say.Last year, claims emerged that Meghan had bullied one of her closest advisers during her time at Kensington Palace.The Duchess of Sussex allegedly drove two personal assistants out of the household and undermined the confidence of a third.The BFM TV series is the latest investigation into the Meghan allegations and the royal brother’s bitter fall-out.It claims that “traumatised” staff rapidly resigned from the Royal Household over Meghan’s alleged behaviour, setting up a WhatsApp group called “The Sussex Survivors’ Club”.The documentary will be released on the 25th anniversary of Princess Diana’s death.In the program, Pierrick Geais, a royal author who has written a book about the Duke of Cambridge, exposes the alleged argument over Meghan Markle.“William, who already didn’t like his sister-in-law very much, became furious,” he said.“He called Harry directly, and Harry slammed the phone down.“Harry didn’t want to know anything, and so William jumped in a car towards Kensington Palace, where he was going to confront Prince Harry.”The TV series also entirely blames, “The behaviour of Meghan for being at the heart of the break-up between William and Harry.”The documentary features an email from Jason Knauf, former communications secretary to the Sussexes, written to Simon Case, William’s then private secretary.The 2018 email claimed Meghan had “bullied” two female personal assistants “out of the Household”, referring to one of the staff members as Y.It read: “The Duchess seems intent on always having someone as a target. She’s bullying Y, and seeking to undermine her confidence.“We have had report after report from people who have been witnessing this unacceptable behaviour towards Y.”The email continued: “I am very concerned that the Duchess had been bullying and harassing two personal assistants, to the extent that she provoked their resignation during the course of the last year.”“During 2018 there was indeed a spate of resignations among Meghan Markle’s team. “Former members have even set up an informal group that they called between them, the Sussex Survivors’ Club. Some of them still remain traumatised.”One alleged victim claimed to be so afraid of Meghan Markle that she felt physically ill by the prospect of talking to her.Valentine Low, the Times Royal correspondent, says in the documentary: “There was a person who was so terrified by a conversation she was about to have with Meghan that she said, ‘I feel sick’. Some of these young women have been broken.”Since the allegations of bullying emerged last year, Buckingham Palace launched a legal inquiry into witnesses’ claims.But to the disappointment of royal fans, the bullying probe will never be published.Critics questioned why the investigation was even necessary after as the completed dossier will reportedly remain secret for confidentiality reasons.Some even suggested it was a royal cover-up.The Duchess of Sussex has yet to comment on the scandal, despite just launching a new podcast focusing on female stereotypes.She and her husband controversially “stepped back” from royal duties and now live in Montecito, California, with their two young children. The couple are due to return to Britain in September, when Meghan will speak about “female empowerment” at a conference in Manchester.This article was originally published by The Sun and was reproduced here with permission.

Powered by WPeMatico