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The Independent UK
The Independent UK
Pol Allingham

Prince Harry says his tell-all book Spare was ‘not about revenge’

The Duke of Sussex has said his “conscience is clear” after speaking out against members of the royal family as he defended his controversial memoir Spare.

The book came out in January 2023 and further opened a rift with his brother, Prince William, with claims that the Prince of Wales had physically attacked him.

The well-publicised memoir also covered Prince Harry’s mother Diana’s death, as well as his sex life, drug use and time served in the army.

Speaking to The Guardian during a visit to Kyiv, which followed several days in the UK, Harry told the newspaper his autobiography was a “series of corrections to stories already out there”.

Following his visit to the UK, which saw the duke reunited with his father, the King, in their first face-to-face meeting for more than a year, he said he would like to spend more time in the country and that the past week had “definitely brought that closer”.

His Kyiv visit was with a team from his Invictus Games Foundation after an invitation from the Ukrainian government and Olga Rudneva, chief executive of the Superhumans Centre, an orthopaedic clinic and rehabilitation centre for adults and children affected by the war in Ukraine.

Harry told The Guardian: “I know that [speaking out] annoys some people and it goes against the narrative. The book? It was a series of corrections to stories already out there. One point of view had been put out and it needed to be corrected.”

He added: “I don’t believe that I aired my dirty laundry in public. It was a difficult message, but I did it in the best way possible. My conscience is clear.”

“It is not about revenge, it is about accountability,” he said in the interview.

‘Spare’ came out in January 2023 and further opened a rift between the two brothers (AFP/Getty)

In Kyiv, the duke participated in a panel discussion at the National Museum of the History of Ukraine in the Second World War, during which he paid tribute to “the wives and mothers who keep their loved ones on the straight and narrow, they deserve as much respect as anyone who serves”.

Asked about advice for those leaving military service and who may miss the camaraderie, Harry said: “You will feel lost at times, like you lack purpose, but however dark those days are, there is light at the end of the tunnel.

“You just need to look for it, because there will always be someone – a mother, father, sibling, friend, or comrade – there to pick you up.”

He added: “Don’t stay silent. Silence will hold you in the dark.

The duke met with his father for the first time in 19 months this week – pictured here in 2018 (PA)

“Open up to your friends and family because in doing so you give them permission to do the same.”

Harry also met Ukraine’s minister for veteran affairs, Natalia Kalmykova, to discuss the ways the Invictus Games Foundation and the international community can improve support for wounded, injured and sick serving personnel and veterans with life-changing injuries who are returning home.

On Wednesday, the Sussexes’ charitable foundation Archewell announced it had donated $500,000 (£369,000) to projects supporting injured children from Gaza and Ukraine.

The grants will be used to help the World Health Organisation with medical evacuations and also to fund work developing prosthetics for youngsters seriously hurt in the conflicts.

On Sunday, the Duchess of Sussex shared a picture on Instagram of two glasses of rosé from her As Ever collection with the caption “when your beau is back in town”, which could be seen as a nod to Harry’s return to the US.

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