Tag: Meghan

  • Harry and Meghan call for social media protections for children

    Harry and Meghan call for social media protections for children

    Prince Harry and his wife Meghan on Thursday called for stronger protections for children on social media saying “enough is not being done” as they unveiled a memorial in New York.

    “We want to make sure that things are changed so that… no more kids are lost to social media,” the British prince told the BBC after he and Meghan unveiled a tribute to children who have died due to the dangers of the internet.

    The “Lost Screen Memorial” is part of a project by the Duke and Duchess of Sussex’s non-profit Archewell Foundation to support parents whose children have been affected by online dangers.

    The one-day installation is made up of 50 enlarged smartphone screens displaying photos of children who died “as a result of the harm they suffered on social media”.

    According to the prince, who cut ties with the British royal family in 2020 and moved to California in the United States, tech firms are “getting away” with sub-par protections by citing privacy reasons.

    “We’re just grateful that our kids are too young to be on social media at this point,” said Harry, who has a son, Archie, and a daughter, Lilibet, with Meghan, adding that “life is better off social media”.

    The couple are committed to “creating a safer digital world” according to their website, and say they have been troubled by their treatment on social media and the British press.

    Archewell Foundation’s website states: “The technology companies who profit from children’s time on their apps have an obligation to design them with safety in mind and should be held to safety standards.”

    At a separate protest on Thursday, dozens of parents gathered near the New York office of tech giant Meta to demand better online protections for children, according to the BBC.

    Also on Thursday the UK’s broadcasting regulator Ofcom announced that tech firms failing to prevent children from accessing harmful content will face fines or even elimination from the UK market under measures launching in July.

  • Prince Harry plays sit-down volleyball on Nigeria visit with Meghan

    Prince Harry plays sit-down volleyball on Nigeria visit with Meghan

    Day two of the Duke and Duchess of Sussex’s Nigeria visit began with a game of sitting volleyball.

    In Abuja, the couple spent time with Nigeria Unconquered, which compiles the country’s Invictus Games team.

    Harry and Meghan are to speak at a reception hosted by the Nigerian military’s chief of defence staff.

    The duchess will later co-host a Women in Leadership event with Dr Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, director general of the World Trade Organization.

    After arriving at the Armed Forces’ Officers Mess and being given scarves in the green and white colours of Nigeria, Harry and Meghan watched a game of sitting volleyball, before Harry was invited to play with the team.

    The Duke participated in a few rounds of the game, which were played by ‘Team Harry’ and ‘Team CDS’ – referring to the military’s chief of defence staff who is behind the couple’s visit to Nigeria.

    The other players were army veterans, most wounded in battle against the country’s Islamist insurgency.

    On the duke’s team was former Nigerian soldier Peacemaker Azuegbulam, who lost his leg in combat against Boko Haram. He became the first African to win gold at the Invictus Games in Germany last year.

    The Duke then joined in the team’s war cry before speaking with families and friends of the athletes.

    Last year, Nigeria became the first African country to take part in the Invictus Games, a sporting competition for wounded military personnel and veterans, co-founded by Prince Harry in 2014.

    On the first day of the mini-tour on Friday, Harry spoke about the joy the Nigeria team brought to the games in Düsseldorf, Germany.

    The charity Nigeria Unconquered, which will put together Nigeria’s team for next year’s Invictus Games in Canada, helps wounded, sick and injured service personnel to “find new purpose” through sport.

    On Saturday, Meghan was presented with a bouquet of roses by six-year-old Royalty Ojeh, daughter of the founder of Nigeria Unconquered, Bobby Ojeh. Touched by the gesture, the duchess offered Royalty one of the roses to keep.

    After the sit-down volleyball game, the duke and duchess attended a reception which included performances from drummers and traditional dancers as well as remarks from various officials.

    Dr Abike Dabiri-Erewa, chairwoman of the Nigerians in Diaspora Commission, shared her delight at the duchess’s Nigerian heritage, telling Meghan she was too beautiful not to have been Nigerian.

    She presented Meghan and Harry with an outfit made of aso oke, a hand-woven cloth from south-west Nigeria.

    In an address, Harry shared a story from his trip to a military rehabilitation centre in Kaduna on Friday, where he met 50 wounded service personnel who were in hospital.

    “There were two of the 50 that were a little different,” he said. “They had smiles on faces. One of them was doing push-ups. I was intrigued.”

    He added: “They knew their life wasn’t defined from the injuries of their past – that is what Invictus is all about and that is what your new centre will be about.”

    The audience was shown a video of a 3D render of a “state-of-the-art” Invictus Centre authorities hope to build in Abuja soon.

    Before arriving in Nigeria, Prince Harry visited London as part of celebrations for the 10th anniversary of the Invictus Games, and attended a service of thanksgiving at St Paul’s Cathedral.

    Meanwhile, the King, whose cancer treatment is ongoing, met members of the public at a Buckingham Palace garden party a little over two miles away.

    A spokesperson for the duke confirmed he would not see his father during his time in the UK due to the King’s “full programme” but that he “hopes to see him soon”.

    Harry had last been in the UK in February to visit the King soon after he was diagnosed with cancer.