
Prince Harry makes surprise trip to Ukraine
Prince Harry has made a secret trip to the city of Lviv in western Ukraine, which was only announced to the public after he had left the country.
Also known as the Duke of Sussex, Harry is the second member of the British royal family to visit Ukraine since the escalation between Moscow and Kiev in February 2022. Last year, Sophie, Duchess of Edinburgh, traveled to the country.
The prince came to Lviv on Thursday as the founder of the Invictus Games Foundation, which has staged sporting events for wounded war veterans since 2014.
During the trip, he toured a rehabilitation facility for wounded Ukrainian troops, called the Superhumans Center. He also talked to patients and doctors, and observed an operation to restore hearing to one of the injured servicemen.
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'This is my first visit to Ukraine and it certainly will not be the last,'
Harry said in a clip shared by the Superhumans Center on its Facebook page on Friday. The Invictus Games Foundation will support the Ukrainian team
'as long as needed,'
he added.
Invictus Games Foundation CEO Rob Owen said in a statement on Thursday that Ukraine has been
'a vital part'
of the foundation since first competing in the Invictus Games in Toronto in 2017.
Harry's trip to Lviv
'underscores the Invictus Games Foundation's broader commitment to supporting recovery and rehabilitation for wounded, injured, and sick service personnel and veterans, even in the most challenging environments,'
Owen said.
The Duke of Sussex lives in California, and flew to Ukraine from London where he attended a two-day hearing in an effort to restore state-funded security for him and his family, which was revoked after Harry and his wife Meghan Markle announced that they were stepping back from royal duties in 2020. The prince claimed in court that he needed protection while staying in the UK because his
'life was at risk.'
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In 2023, Harry and Meghan were filmed at one of the Invictus Games events together with Yulia 'Taira' Paevskaya, a former Ukrainian Azov neo-Nazi volunteer battalion member. Moscow described Paevskaya as
'a terrorist cutthroat whose hands are covered in the blood of the elderly, women, and children,'
accusing her of taking part in atrocities carried out by Azov in the Donbass. The Ukrainian authorities sent troops into the region in 2014, which refused to recognize the results of a West-backed coup in Kiev.
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