THE Duke and Duchess of Sussex s deeply personal interview with Oprah Winfrey has sent shockwaves across the globe, with damaging revelations about the Royal Family. The no-holds barred interview with Harry and Meghan, covering topics including racism, mental health, them being targeted by a hostile national press and Royal Family dynamics, was first aired on TV in America on Sunday night, and will be shown on ITV on Monday night. But amid the turmoil the couple said they have suffered in the past few years, which has culminated in them formally stepping down from royal duties and moving to California, there was reflection of a happy time the Duchess of Sussex enjoyed – when she visited Chester with the Queen in June 2018.
Chris JacksonGetty Images
Though Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, and husband Prince Harry have bid adieu to life as senior members of the royal family, the duchess revealed that Queen Elizabeth II has always been particularly kind to her during the Sussexes tell-all interview with Oprah Winfrey.
On the difference between family and business, Meghan said, It s hard for people to distinguish the two because it s a family business, right? So there s the family. And then there s the people that are running the institution. Those are two separate things.
The duchess emphasized the distinction between those two concepts. It s important to be able to compartmentalize that because the queen, for example, has always been wonderful to me, she said. We had one of our first joint engagement together. She asked me to join her and I was on the train . and we had breakfast together that morning.
Así fue el primer encuentro de Meghan Markle con la reina Isabel hola.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from hola.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Derek William Barks, Derek Moore, Jason Shingler and Dorothy Bailey died in the 2015 explosion
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A worker at a mill where an explosion killed four people has told a court he was sacked after raising safety concerns.
BBC News
Published
image captionDerek William Barks, Derek Moore, Jason Shingler and Dorothy Bailey died in the 2015 explosion
A worker at a wood mill where four people died in a blast said he had been sacked after raising safety concerns.
Matthew Dutton told a trial at Chester Town Hall he had been told to go home after refusing to clean part of the mill workers believed was dangerous.
He said machinery at Wood Flour Mills in Bosley, Cheshire, was never turned off, the dust in the area was up to his knees and the air was unbreathable .
A firm and its director are on trial over the deaths in July 2015.