Prince Harry: I would like to reconnect with my father and my brother, but I do not see a "desire for reconciliation"

Harry wants to be part of a "family, not an institution."

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Prince Harry wants to “reconnect” with his father, King Charles III, and his brother William, with whom his relationship is frigid, but he does not see a “desire for reconciliation” from them, according to an excerpt from an interview that will be published before the publication of his upcoming memoirs.

A month after the documentary about Harry and his wife, Megan, was broadcast on Netflix, the British royal family is preparing for a new exciting series of information about the couple’s withdrawal from the family and their move in 2020 to California, with the publication of the book “SPARE” scheduled for January 10.

On the occasion of the publication of the book, the prince gave two interviews, one with the British channel ITV and the other with the CBS channel in the United States, which will be broadcast next Sunday.

"They showed no desire whatsoever for reconciliation," the Duke of Sussex said in a short propaganda clip broadcast by ITV yesterday, without knowing what exactly was meant by these words.

He added in the promotional clip, “I would like to reconnect with my father.

And also with my brother.

"I want (to be part of) a family, not an institution," said Harry, 38, adding, "They think it's best to keep us as bad guys."

These criticisms come in light of the transitional phase that the British royal family is going through after Charles III ascended the throne following the death of his mother, Queen Elizabeth II, on September 8, at the age of 96.

The coronation of the rulers of the United Kingdom and 14 other Commonwealth countries is scheduled for May 6, in a major event that will be broadcast around the world.

The documentary, which was released by Netflix last month in six episodes, allowed the Duke and Duchess of Sussex to give their view of withdrawing from the royal family, a move that hit their popularity greatly in the United Kingdom, where the local press often describes them as selfish and spoiled.

Although the documentary did not contain any exciting leaks, the couple settled their accounts with the media, which they accused of harassing them and of causing Megan's abortion.

They also accused the royal family of lying and not being able to protect them.

According to the Sunday Times, Prince Harry's memoirs contain more information directed against his brother William than King Charles III, which confirms the dispute between the two brothers.

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