Prince Harry has lost a court challenge against a British government decision to strip him of taxpayer-funded protection after he quit royal duties.
Harry took legal action against the Home Office after it decided in February 2020 he would no longer be given the “same degree” of protection when in the country.
During a hearing in December, lawyers for Harry argued the decision meant he was “singled out” and treated “less favourably,” British news agency PA Media reported.
According to the news agency, his lawyers also cited a failure to consider the impact on the UK’s reputation of a “successful attack” on Harry, who has lived with his wife Meghan in California since July 2020.
But the court ruled that the decision was justified and “not marred by procedural unfairness.”
The Duke of Sussex has been vocal about the security of his family, often drawing comparisons between his wife’s treatment to that faced by his mother, Diana. The late Princess of Wales died in 1997 after suffering internal injuries resulting from a high-speed car crash in Paris.
This legal case was one of several lawsuits that Prince Harry has undertaken in the UK. In January, he dropped a separate libel claim he brought against Associated Newspapers Limited (ANL), the publisher of the Mail on Sunday.
Prince Harry sued ANL for libel over a February 2022 story about the Duke’s High Court case against the UK’s Home Office concerning security arrangements when he and his family visit the country.
This is a developing story and will be updated.