logo
Inside Meghan Markle's Viral Polo Moment That Sentebale Chair Says Escalated Tensions with Prince Harry

Inside Meghan Markle's Viral Polo Moment That Sentebale Chair Says Escalated Tensions with Prince Harry

Yahoo31-03-2025

An awkward moment caught on camera between Meghan Markle and Sentebale chair Dr. Sophie Chandauka is back in the spotlight after Prince Harry's shock departure from the charity
The Duchess of Sussex appeared to direct Chandauka away from Harry and next to her during a group photo moment at the Royal Salute Polo Challenge in April 2024
reports that Prince Harry sent Chandauka a message after she declined to issue a statement following the incident
Prince Harry's unexpected resignation from his Sentebale charity has reignited interest in an awkward moment involving him, his wife Meghan Markle and the organization's chairwoman at a 2024 polo tournament.
On March 26, the Duke of Sussex, 40, and his Sentebale co-founder, Prince Seeiso of Lesotho, announced their departure as patrons of the charity they founded in 2006 to honor their late mothers. The move sent shockwaves amid reports of internal turmoil and financial struggles within the organization.
Chandauka claims her dispute with Harry began in April 2024 when she refused his team's request to publicly defend Meghan Markle after an awkward on-stage exchange led to negative media coverage.
Footage from the Royal Salute Polo Challenge in Wellington, Fla., last April shows Harry, Meghan, and Chandauka posing with a trophy. Initially, Chandauka stands beside Harry, but Meghan, 43, appears to direct her to move next to her instead. Chandauka then awkwardly ducks under the trophy to switch positions.
Related: Why Prince Harry, Prince Seeiso and Sentable Trustees Walked Away from Charity: 'They Couldn't Continue in Good Conscience'
The group then appears to pose cheerfully for the photo, celebrating Prince Harry and his teammates' 3-1 victory for the Royal Salute Sentebale Team over the Grand Champions Polo Club Team, captained by Harry's friend and Sentebale ambassador, Nacho Figueras.
In a March 29 interview with the Financial Times, Chandauka claimed that the photo moment with Meghan sparked tensions with Prince Harry, which later escalated. According to her, the Duke of Sussex urged her to publicly address the incident, but she refused.
"I said no, we're not setting a precedent by which we become an extension of the Sussex PR machine," Chandauka told the outlet.
Related: Why Prince Harry, Prince Seeiso and Sentable Trustees Walked Away from Charity: 'They Couldn't Continue in Good Conscience'
A source close to Sentebale patrons and trustees told PEOPLE that the dispute is rooted in governance concerns, not personal grievances. Regarding the specific instance Chandauka referenced, the source says they cannot comment on the details but stresses that they "only ever want the truth to be shared."
In December 2024, Prince Harry was spotted warmly greeting Chandauka outside New York City's Ki Smith Gallery ahead of a reception for Friend, an art exhibit benefiting Sentebale. The two appeared to engage in a friendly chat before heading inside for the event. The showcase, featuring works by pioneers of Minimalism and Op Art, donated 100% of its sales to the charity. During brief remarks, Harry expressed gratitude on behalf of Sentebale, saying the team was "massively grateful" for the generosity.
In a March 30 interview with Sky News, Chandauka claimed she had experienced 'harassment and bullying at scale' following Prince Harry's departure from Sentebale.
On March 31, The Telegraph reported that Harry had previously messaged Chandauka after she refused to issue a statement about the polo photo moment with Meghan.
"He initially asked his team to contact the Zimbabwean-born lawyer and request she issue a statement quashing any rumours of tension between her and the Duchess," the outlet reports. "However, after she refused to be drawn into the row, Prince Harry fired a direct message to her allegedly demanding that she 'explain herself.' "
According to The Telegraph, sources described the message as 'unpleasant' in tone and 'imperious' in language, leaving Chandauka caught off guard and further straining an already tense situation.
Last week, Prince Harry and Prince Seeiso, 58, issued a joint statement to announce the "devastating" decision that they were stepping down as patrons of Sentebale, supporting the trustees who resigned over fallout with Chandauka. The friends created the organization in memory of their late mothers, Princess Diana and Queen Mother 'Mamohato Bereng Seeiso.
"With heavy hearts, we have resigned from our roles as Patrons of the organization until further notice, in support of and solidarity with the board of trustees who have had to do the same. It is devastating that the relationship between the charity's trustees and the chair of the board broke down beyond repair, creating an untenable situation," they said, in part.
After the board of trustees asked Chandauka, who took on the leadership role in July 2023, to resign, she lodged a lawsuit against the charity, which supports young people in Lesotho and Botswana. The Charity Commission in the U.K. confirmed they are investigating.
Can't get enough of PEOPLE's Royals coverage? to get the latest updates on Kate Middleton, Meghan Markle and more!
A Sentebale source familiar with the situation tells PEOPLE that the chairwoman placed significant financial strain on the organization.
The source says that when Chandauka was appointed in July 2023, the organization was in stable financial standing, a situation which changed under her leadership.
"The trustees felt that they couldn't in good conscience continue to place legal and financial strain on the charity by it proceeding in court and chose to resign," the source said.
Read the original article on People

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Where Queen Camilla Stands on King Charles and Prince Harry's Rift
Where Queen Camilla Stands on King Charles and Prince Harry's Rift

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Where Queen Camilla Stands on King Charles and Prince Harry's Rift

Prince Harry is embroiled in a yearslong feud with both his father King Charles and his brother Prince William. How does Queen Camilla feel about it all? Well, she's intentionally staying out of it, a source said. There is a complicated dynamic between Camilla and Harry anyway, going all the way back to when Camilla was Charles' mistress during his marriage to Harry's mother Princess the father-son rift between King Charles and Prince Harry rages on—escalated, perhaps, even further by Harry's emotional BBC interview last month where he said, in part, that he didn't know how much longer his father had to live—how does Queen Camilla feel about it all? It seems, according to reporting from People, that Camilla is keeping her distance from the feud, as well as that of Harry and brother Prince William. She simply 'stays out of it,' a source told the outlet for its new cover story this week. Camilla—who was long the mistress of Charles during the King's marriage to Harry's mother, Princess Diana—was described as 'dangerous' by the Duke of Sussex in his 2023 memoir Spare. Harry also alleged that Camilla leaked stories about him to the press in an effort to rehabilitate her image following years of bad press as the other woman. Of Charles and Camilla's 2005 wedding—eight years after the death of Diana in a 1997 car accident—Harry wrote he 'had complicated feelings about gaining a stepparent, who I thought had recently sacrificed me on her personal PR altar.' Harry elaborated in a 2023 interview with Good Morning America, where he said that Camilla 'had a reputation or an image to rehabilitate, and whatever conversations happened, whatever deals or trading was made right at the beginning, she was led to believe that that would be the best way to doing it.' As for their relationship now, Harry said at the time, 'We haven't spoken for a long time.' 'She's my stepmother,' he continued. 'I don't look at her as an evil stepmother. I see someone who married into this institution, and done everything she can to improve her own reputation and her own image, for her own sake.' Royal biographer Christopher Wilson told People that Harry 'was justified in his complaint that he and William were used in the early days to legitimize the partnership' of Charles and Camilla. Of the Queen, 'Over time, she's learned to roll with the punches,' he added. 'Harry's feelings have been well-known to her over many years. Her reaction to Harry's comments would be limited to a sad shake of the head.' Of Camilla becoming Queen upon his father's coronation in May 2023, royal biographer and editor-in-chief of Majesty Magazine Ingrid Seward said, 'William is quite calm about it. But it will stick in Harry's throat a bit.' As for the ongoing feud between Harry and his father and brother, 'the underlying issue is trust,' royal biographer Sally Bedell Smith told People. 'The King and William don't trust Harry and Meghan [Markle] with any kind of confidential conversation.' Harry's recent BBC interview, royal biographer Valentine Low added, 'wasn't meant to be an attack, but it would be seen as one. It makes Charles reaching out even harder.' Read the original article on InStyle

Editors Guild Protests Against Nonfiction Producer Story Syndicate At Tribeca Premiere Of OceanGate Submersible Documentary ‘Titan'
Editors Guild Protests Against Nonfiction Producer Story Syndicate At Tribeca Premiere Of OceanGate Submersible Documentary ‘Titan'

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Editors Guild Protests Against Nonfiction Producer Story Syndicate At Tribeca Premiere Of OceanGate Submersible Documentary ‘Titan'

EXCLUSIVE: The Motion Picture Editors Guild (IATSE Local 700) has staged a protest against nonfiction production company Story Syndicate outside the Tribeca Film Festival premiere of its OceanGate submersible documentary Titan. Audience members were greeted outside the Village East by Angelika theater Friday evening by guild members distributing fliers that call attention to Story Syndicate's 'anti-union conduct' and put pressure on management amid contentious negotiations. More from Deadline Disney Layoffs Hit TV Development & Casting Executive Ranks Crew Strikes Against Terrence Howard Film 'Cipher' After Production Refuses IATSE Contract IBEW Touts "Landmark" New Tentative Agreement With CBS The MPEG brought charges of Unfair Labor Practices against Story Syndicate before the National Labor Relations Board in March, accusing the Harry & Meghan producers of refusal to bargain and bad faith bargaining. 'This company brands itself as a champion of progressive filmmaking,' Alan Heim, ACE, President of Motion Picture Editors Guild, said in a statement to Deadline. 'But when it comes to honoring the rights of the very workers who bring these stories to life, their actions tell a different story. Editors deserve respect, security, and a contract that reflects their value.' He continued: 'We support bold nonfiction storytelling, but the treatment of workers behind the camera should be just as bold, just as fair, and just as progressive.' The MPEG and the Writers Guild of America East won their joint effort to unionize producers and editorial employees at Story Syndicate in 2023. Since then, the MPEG says, management has 'repeatedly delayed negotiations, backtracked on offers it had previously placed on the table, and refused to budge from outrageous positions calculated to kill the prospect of a negotiated agreement.' The union also accuses Story Syndicate of insisting upon retaining the right to cut employees' weekly pay without cause or warning. This union action against the company comes about six months after the Editors Guild and the Writers Guild of America East jointly petitioned Story Syndicate to finalize a fair deal. At the time, more than 250 members of the unions called on the company to 'be the industry leaders they are and set a precedent others can follow to create a truly inclusive and transparent work environment.' 'Long delays, proposals that are out of line with industry standards, and refusals to respond to important proposals would not reflect well on the company's stated principles,' read the petition, which included signatures from Lilly Wachowski, John Walsh, Tom Fontana, and Josh Gondelman. Titan explores the story behind the OceanGate submersible implosion that dominated the news cycle for days in 2023. Directed by Marc Monroe, the film is set to premiere globally on Netflix on June 11. Story Syndicate was co-founded by Liz Garbus and Dan Cogan in 2019. It has become quite known for producing social impact documentaries and nonfiction series, such as Gone Girls: The Long Island Serial Killer and Last Take: Rust and the Story of Halyna. Other projects from the company include Nuclear Family (HBO), I'll Be Gone In The Dark (HBO), and The Innocence Files (Netflix) as well as documentary features like Fauci (Nat Geo), Becoming Costeau (Nat Geo), Mayor Pete (Amazon), Britney vs. Spears (Netflix), and All In: The Fight For Democracy (Amazon). Best of Deadline 2025 TV Series Renewals: Photo Gallery 2025 TV Cancellations: Photo Gallery 'Stick' Soundtrack: All The Songs You'll Hear In The Apple TV+ Golf Series

How Queen Camilla Feels About King Charles and Prince Harry's Royal Rift (Exclusive)
How Queen Camilla Feels About King Charles and Prince Harry's Royal Rift (Exclusive)

Yahoo

time5 hours ago

  • Yahoo

How Queen Camilla Feels About King Charles and Prince Harry's Royal Rift (Exclusive)

Queen Camilla is keeping her distance from the rift dividing King Charles and Prince Harry Tensions remain high as Harry says his father has stopped speaking to him — and Prince William has shown no interest in reconciling Prince Harry, 40, described his stepmother as "dangerous" in his memoir, 'Spare'Queen Camilla stays out of the fray when it comes to the painful rift distancing King Charles and Prince William from Prince Harry. As the King and Prince Harry stand at a pivotal moment in their fractured relationship and William remains estranged from his brother, Queen Camilla is not getting involved in the turbulence between her husband and his younger son. The Queen "stays out of it," a source tells PEOPLE in this week's exclusive cover story. The family's fractures came to light when the Duke of Sussex and his wife, Meghan Markle, stepped back from their royal roles in 2020, and today, the deep divide between the King and Harry remains one of the most painful fissures in his reign. Harry and Meghan moved to the U.S. amid mounting family tensions and the relationship was further strained by the Sussexes' high-profile interviews, an explosive Netflix docuseries and Harry's memoir Spare, in which he described Camilla as "dangerous." In his groundbreaking 2023 memoir, the Duke of Sussex reflected on the complicated emotions he felt around his father's 2005 marriage to Camilla — and alleged that she leaked stories about him to the press in an effort to rehabilitate her image. "I had complex feelings about gaining a stepparent, who I thought had recently sacrificed me on her personal PR altar," Prince Harry said in his memoir. In an interview with Good Morning America in 2023, he further explained: "She had a reputation or an image to rehabilitate, and whatever conversations happened, whatever deals or trading was made right at the beginning, she was led to believe that that would be the best way to doing it." Asked about his relationship with her now, he said: "We haven't spoken for a long time. I love every member of my family, despite the differences. So when I see her, we're perfectly pleasant with each other. She's my stepmother. I don't look at her as an evil stepmother. I see someone who married into this institution, and done everything she can to improve her own reputation and her own image, for her own sake." King Charles' continued treatment for cancer adds further urgency to the possibility of reconciliation between father and son before it's too late. The father and son were briefly on the same continent in late May when the King and Queen Camilla traveled to Canada for the State Opening of Parliament in what was interpreted as a show of support for the Commonwealth realm amid tensions with the U.S., but Harry and Charles didn't cross paths. While Prince William, 42, remains distant from the Duke and Duchess of Sussex, some royal observers believe King Charles should make the first move in repairing his relationship with Harry. But inside palace walls, hesitation reigns. There has been a desire to reconnect at times, but "the underlying issue is trust," royal biographer Sally Bedell Smith tells PEOPLE. "The King and William don't trust Harry and Meghan with any kind of confidential conversation," Bedell Smith says. Insiders add that King Charles isn't encouraged by his inner circle. The Prince of Wales has shown no interest in extending an olive branch, and senior aides like Clive Alderton, who was targeted in Spare, are unlikely to encourage outreach. "There is not a good angel in his ear to say, 'Be a good dad and make the first move,' " says Valentine Low, author of the upcoming book Power and the Palace. Can't get enough of PEOPLE's Royals coverage? to get the latest updates on Kate Middleton, Meghan Markle and more! Despite Harry's plea for peace in a bombshell BBC interview after losing a legal appeal to restore his state-funded security on May 2, his comments were widely seen as another blow to the bond. The Duke of Sussex said there that the King "won't speak to me because of this security stuff" and alleged "I don't know how much longer my father has" in an allusion to cancer diagnosis announced last year. "It wasn't meant to be an attack, but it would be seen as one," says Low. "It makes Charles reaching out even harder." Read the original article on People

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store