The Duke and Duchess of Sussex threat widening the rift with the royal family if they select to receive a humanitarian award in person, it has been claimed.
In early December, Prince Harry and Meghan will be recognised for their "moral courage" and their "willingness to communicate up".
They are predicted to tour to New York to acquire their award after they had been honoured by way of the Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights organisation.
The royal couple has been named this year's Ripple of Hope Award laureates in consciousness of their work on racial justice, intellectual health, and different social influence initiatives through their Archewell Foundation.
They were applauded for their decision to speak up about racism, trying to "change the narrative on racial justice and intellectual fitness around the world".
And that includes feedback made to Oprah Winfrey about alleged racism within the royal family.
The controversial interview resulted in a assertion from Buckingham Palace that said "recollections might also vary", acting to throw doubt on some of the couple's damming claims.
Now, British journalist Jennie Bond says the Duke and Duchess of Sussex could make tensions worse by using accepting the award.
Speaking on Breakfast with Martin Daubney and Isabel Webster on GB News, she said: "It's put the Sussexes in a as a substitute tough position, I think.
"Do they say, 'No, we don't desire to even acknowledge that you're presenting this award? Do we go and be given it in person?' Perhaps the center way of simply accepting it, but no longer turning up, is something.
"I assume if they do go alongside and accept this award on a public stage, yeah, it's going to make matters even worse, the rift could be even deeper.
"I feel very, very move about this award is even presented to the Sussexes due to the fact through offering it, it is a tacit accusation … that there is structural racism within the royal family. I do not assume that's the case.
"The Commonwealth, which is generally made up of people of colour, is vastly important, and massively vital to our late Queen and King Charles, as he made clear yesterday."
The Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights organization is a non-for-profit created in 1968 to realize the former president's "dream of a more just and peaceful world".
Prince Harry and Meghan now be part of the ranks of Joe Biden, Barack Obama, Bill and Hillary Clinton, Bono and Desmond Tutu as preceding winners of the award.
The organisation's president Kerry Kennedy said: "They embody the kind of moral braveness that my father as soon as called the 'one essential, critical nice for these who searching for to alternate a world that yields most painfully to change'".
Recently, Kennedy known as Prince Harry and Meghan's interview with Oprah "heroic".
She informed El Confidencial : "They went to the oldest institution in UK records and told them what they had been doing wrong, that they could not have structural racism inside the institution; that they may want to no longer maintain a misunderstanding about intellectual health.
"They knew that if they did this there would be consequences, that they would be ostracised, they would lose their family, their position inside this structure, and that human beings would blame them for it.
"They have finished it anyway because they believed they couldn't live with themselves if they did not question this authority. I assume they have been heroic in taking this step."
The ceremony will be held on December 6, four days after Prince William and Catherine take to the stage in Boston for the second Earthshot Prize Awards.
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Tags: Queen, Prince Charles, Camilla, Prince Louis, Prince William and Kate Middleton, Prince Charles, Prince Harry, Meghan, Lilibet
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