Prince Harry has turned 40 – spending his birthday in his new California home, where he lives with his wife Meghan and his children Archie and Lilibet.
This is a look at his life – from newborn baby to cheeky toddler, from teenager to man.
Harry was born on 15 September 1984 at St Mary’s Hospital, London.
Image: The Prince and Princess of Wales leave hospital in London with baby Harry in 1984. Pic: PA
As a young boy he was close to his mother Lady Diana and older brother William.
Image: A young Harry on holiday in Majorca with his mother in 1987. Pic: AP
Image: A photo of the two brothers that appeared in the personal album of their mother, Diana, Princess of Wales
Image: Princess Diana with Harry and William on a trip to Niagara Falls in 1991. Pic: AP
His parents divorced in 1996 – and Harry’s life changed forever when Lady Diana died in a car crash in Paris in 1997.
Harry, then aged 12, and William walked behind her coffin as it proceeded through the streets from Kensington Palace to Westminster Abbey.
Harry later said no child “should be asked to do” what they did.
Image: Princes Harry and William joined family members during the funeral procession for their mother Diana. Pic: AP
Image: Prince William and Prince Harry during their mother’s funeral in September 1997. Pic: PA
After the death of Diana, Harry became even closer to William.
Harry said of William when he turned 21: “Ever since our mother died, obviously we were close, but he is the one person on this earth who I can actually really… we can talk about anything.”
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Image: Harry and William leaving church in Sandringham on Christmas Day in 2003. Pic: PA
Image: Prince Harry with Prince William and his cousin Zara Tindall after his father’s wedding to Queen Camilla in 2005. Pic: PA
Image: A teenage Prince Harry with Spice Girls Mel B, Emma, and Victoria in Johannesburg in 1997
Image: Prince Harry during his school years at Eton College in 2003. Pic: Reuters
The Duke of Sussex spent 10 years in the army, including two frontline tours to Afghanistan, and is patron of the Invictus Games Foundation, which supports veterans’ recovery through sports competitions.
Image: At Camp Bastion, southern Afghanistan, in 2012. Pic: Reuters
Image: In the kitchen at Camp Bastion in 2012. Pic: Reuters
Prince Harry had a long relationship with Chelsy Davy.
Image: Prince Harry and Chelsy Davy were an on-again, off-again couple until May 2010. Pic: Reuters
The Duke of Sussex was best man at his brother’s wedding – and worked with William and Kate on joint projects, including raising awareness for mental health problems.
He undertook public duties during the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee in 2012, including travelling to Belize, Bahamas and Jamaica.
Image: With Usain Bolt in March 2012. Pic: AP
Image: The Duke of Sussex following in Diana’s footsteps, walking through a minefield in Angola, to see the work of landmine clearance charity the Halo Trust. Pic: PA
Harry started dating Meghan Markle after a blind date in 2016. They first appeared in public together at the Invictus Games in Toronto in September 2017.
Image: Prince Harry pictured with Meghan Markle for the first time at the 2017 Invictus Games in Toronto. Pic: PA
Prince Harry said he knew Meghan was “the one” when they announced their engagement two months later.
Image: The couple announce their engagement in the grounds of Kensington Palace in November 2017
Image: Official engagement photo from 2017. Pic: Alexi Lubomirski
Millions watched when Harry and his bride tied the knot in a fairy-tale wedding at Windsor Castle in May 2018.
Image: The couple kiss after their wedding ceremony on the steps of St George’s Chapel, Windsor, in May 2018. Pic: Reuters
And it was smiles all around when the Royal Family gathered on the Buckingham Palace balcony that summer.
Image: Prince Harry and Meghan Markle with the late Queen Elizabeth II on the Buckingham Palace balcony in 2018. Pic: AP
Months later, the Sussexes headed to Australia for their first tour as a married couple – and Meghan revealed she was pregnant.
Image: Prince Harry and Meghan in Australia in 2019. Pic: AP
Archie Harrison Mountbatten-Windsor was born in May 2019.
Image: Prince Harry and Meghan with their newborn son Archie in 2019. Pic: AP
Image: Prince Harry with his son Archie during his Christmas break in Canada in late-2019. Pic: PA
Image: Baby Archie with his father and grandfather at his christening in 2019. Pic: Sussex Royal/Instagram
In 2020, the Sussexes took Archie to Africa for their first royal tour as a family of three.
Image: Harry and Meghan with Archie in 2019. Pic: Reuters
But shortly thereafter, Harry dropped a bombshell statement: The Sussexes quit as “senior royals” and wanted to be “financially independent”.
Image: At an awards ceremony in London in March 2020 after the couple announced they were stepping back from royal duties. Pic: Samir Hussein/WireImage
The family moved to California – and gave an explosive interview to Oprah Winfrey.
Meghan famously said “concerns” had been raised about baby Archie’s skin colour before he was born and she had suicidal thoughts during her time in the Royal Family.
Image: Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, and Prince Harry in their interview with Oprah Winfrey
Their second child, Princess Lilibet, was born in 2021.
Image: Harry, Archie, Meghan and Lilibet. Pic: Alexi Lubomirski
Image: Lilibet at an ‘intimate and casual backyard picnic’ for her birthday. Pic: Misan Harriman
That same year, Harry and William unveiled a statue dedicated to their mother Lady Diana. The brothers released a joint statement to honour their mother’s memory, but the rift between them remained.
Image: Prince William and Prince Harry at the unveiling of Princess Diana’s statue at Kensington Palace
Harry came back to the country for the funeral of Prince Philip in 2021.
According to Harry, following their grandfather the Duke of Edinburgh’s funeral in September 2021, Charles had asked the brothers: “Please, boys – don’t make my final years a misery.”
But those who hoped for reconciliation were disappointed.
Image: Harry and William at Prince Philip’s funeral in April 2021
The “Fab Four”, as they were once known, were briefly reunited when Queen Elizabeth II died in 2022.
Image: Kate, William, Harry and Meghan meet members of the public at Windsor Castle following the death of Queen Elizabeth II
At the Coronation of his father, he took a back seat, and flew back quickly after the ceremony.
Image: The royals at the King’s coronation
Image: Harry leaves Westminster Abbey following the coronation ceremony. Pic: Reuters
Harry published his best-selling memoir Spare. There has also been a Netflix documentary looking at the Sussexes’ life.
Image: Harry’s autobiography titled Spare. Pic: PA
Image: Prince Harry was interviewed by host Stephen Colbert about his new memoir Spare. Pic: CBS via AP
Image: The Duke and Duchess of Sussex kissing in a kitchen. Pic: Netflix
Harry has waged a war against tabloids, which he claims have obtained information about his life illegally.
Image: The Duke of Sussex leaving the Rolls Buildings in central London after giving evidence in the phone hacking trial against Mirror Group Newspapers
Recently, the couple travelled to Nigeria.
Image: Harry and Meghan in Abuja, Nigeria, in May. Pic: Reuters
A care worker who reported the alleged abuse of an elderly care home resident, which triggered a criminal investigation, is facing destitution and potential removal from Britain after speaking up.
“Meera”, whose name we have changed to protect her identity, said she witnessed an elderly male resident being punched several times in the back by a carer at the home where she worked.
Sky News is unable to name the care home for legal reasons because of the ongoing police investigation.
“I was [a] whistleblower there,” said Meera, who came to the UK from India last year to work at the home.
“Instead of addressing things, they fired me… I told them everything and they made me feel like I am criminal. I am not criminal, I am saving lives,” she added.
Image: ‘Meera’ spoke up about abuse she said she witnessed in the care home where she worked
Like thousands of foreign care workers, Meera’s employer sponsored her visa. Unless she can find another sponsor, she now faces the prospect of removal from the country.
“I am in trouble right now and no one is trying to help me,” she said.
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Meera said she reported the alleged abuse to her bosses, but was called to a meeting with a manager and told to “change your statement, otherwise we will dismiss you”.
She refused. The following month, she was sacked.
The care home claimed she failed to perform to the required standard in the job.
She went to the police to report the alleged abuse and since then, a number of people from the care home have been arrested. They remain under investigation.
‘Migrants recruited because many are too afraid to speak out’
The home has capacity for over 60 residents. It is unclear if the care home residents or their relatives know about the police investigation or claim of physical abuse.
Since the arrests, the regulator, the Care Quality Commission (CQC), carried out an investigation at the home triggered by the concerns – but the home retained its ‘good’ rating.
Meera has had no reassurance from the authorities that she will be allowed to remain in Britain.
In order to stay, she’ll need to find another care home to sponsor her which she believes will be impossible without references from her previous employer.
She warned families: “I just want to know people in care homes like these… your person, your father, your parents, is not safe.”
She claimed some care homes have preferred to recruit migrants because many are too afraid to speak out.
“You hire local staff, they know the legal rights,” she said. “They can complain, they can work anywhere… they can raise [their] voice,” she said.
Image: Sky’s Becky Johnson spoke to ‘Meera’
Sky News has reported widespread exploitation of care visas and migrant care workers.
Currently migrants make up around a third of the adult social care workforce, with the majority here on visas that are sponsored by their employers.
As part of measures announced in April in the government’s immigration white paper, the care visa route will be closed, meaning care homes will no longer be able to recruit abroad.
‘Whole system is based on power imbalance’
But the chief executive of the Work Rights Centre, a charity that helps migrants with employment issues, is warning that little will change for the tens of thousands of foreign care workers already here.
“The whole system is based on power imbalance and the government announcement doesn’t change that,” Dr Dora-Olivia Vicol told Sky News.
She linked the conditions for workers to poor care for residents.
Image: Work Rights Centre CEO Dr Dora-Olivia Vicol
“I think the power that employers have over migrant workers’ visas really makes a terrible contribution to the quality of care,” she said.
Imran agrees. He came to the UK from Bangladesh, sponsored by a care company unrelated to the one Meera worked for. He says he frequently had to work 14-hour shifts with no break because there weren’t enough staff. He too believes vulnerable people are being put at risk by the working conditions of their carers.
Migrant workers ‘threatened’ over visas
“For four clients, there is [a] minimum requirement for two or three staff. I was doing [it] alone,” he said, in broken English.
“When I try to speak, they just directly threaten me about my visa,” he said.
“I knew two or three of my colleagues, they are facing the same issue like me. But they’re still afraid to speak up because of the visa.”
A government spokesperson called what happened to Imran and Meera “shocking”.
“No one should go to work in fear of their employer, and all employees have a right to speak up if they witness poor practice and care.”
James Bullion, from the CQC, told Sky News it acts on intelligence passed to it to ensure people stay safe in care settings.
Donald Trump may be denied the honour of addressing parliament on his state visit to the UK later this year, with no formal request yet submitted for him to be given that privilege.
Sky News has been told the Speaker of the House of Commons, Sir Lindsay Hoyle, hasn’t so far received a request to invite the US president to speak in parliament when he is expected to visit in September.
It was confirmed to MPs who have raised concerns about the US president being allowed to address both houses.
Kate Osborne, Labour MP for Jarrow and Gateshead East, wrote to the speaker in April asking him to stop Mr Trump from addressing parliament, and tabled an early-day motion outlining her concerns.
“I was happy to see Macron here but feel very differently about Trump,” she said.
“Trump has made some very uncomfortable and worrying comments around the UK government, democracy, the Middle East, particularly around equalities and, of course, Ukraine.
“So, I think there are many reasons why, when we’re looking at a state visit, we should be looking at why they’re being afforded that privilege. Because, of course, it is a privilege for somebody to come and address both of the houses.”
But the timing of the visit may mean that any diplomatic sensitivities, or perceptions of a snub, could be avoided.
Image: France’s President Emmanuel Macron addressed parliament during his state visit this month
Lord Ricketts, a former UK ambassador to France, pointed out that parliament isn’t sitting for much of September, and that could help resolve the issue.
In 2017, he wrote a public letter questioning the decision to give Donald Trump his first state visit, saying it put Queen Elizabeth II in a “very difficult position”.
Parliament rises from 16 September until 13 October due to party conferences.
The dates for the state visit haven’t yet been confirmed by Buckingham Palace or the government.
However, they have not denied that it will take place in September, after Mr Trump appeared to confirm they were planning to hold the state visit that month. The palace confirmed this week that the formal planning for his arrival had begun.
With the King likely to still be in Scotland in early September for events such as the Braemar Gathering, and the anniversary of his accession and the death of Queen Elizabeth on the 8th September, it may be expected that the visit would take place sometime from mid to the end of September, also taking into consideration the dates of the Labour Party conference starting on the 28th September and possibly the Lib Dem’s conference from the 20th-23rd.
Image: Mr Trump has said he believes the trip to the UK will take place in September. Pic: Reuters
When asked about parliamentary recess potentially solving the issue, Ms Osborne said: “It may be a way of dealing with it in a very diplomatic way… I don’t know how much control we have over Trump’s diary.
“But if we can manoeuvre it in a way that means that the House isn’t sitting, then that seems like a good solution, maybe not perfect, because I’d actually like him to know that he’s not welcome.”
A message from the speaker’s office, seen by Sky News, says: “Formal addresses to both Houses of Parliament are not automatically included in the itinerary of such a state visit.
“Whether a foreign head of state addresses parliament, during a state visit or otherwise, is part of the planning decisions.”
Image: Mr Trump made his first state visit to the UK in June 2019 during his first presidency. File pic: Reuters
It’s understood that if the government agrees to a joint address to parliament, the Lord Chamberlain’s office writes to the two speakers, on behalf of the King, to ask them to host this.
It will be Mr Trump’s second state visit.
During his first, in 2019, he didn’t address parliament, despite the fact that his predecessor, Barack Obama, was asked to do so.
It was unclear if this was due to the fact John Bercow, the speaker at the time, made it clear he wasn’t welcome to do so.
However, it didn’t appear to dampen Mr Trump’s excitement about his time with the Royal Family.
Speaking earlier this year, he described his state visit as “a fest” adding “it’s an honour… I’m a friend of Charles, I have great respect for King Charles and the family, William; we have really just a great respect for the family. And I think they’re setting a date for September.”
It is expected that, like Mr Macron, the pageantry for his trip this time will revolve around Windsor, with refurbishment taking place at Buckingham Palace.
Liverpool have retired the number 20 shirt in honour of Diogo Jota – the first time it has made such a gesture.
The club said it was a “unique tribute to a uniquely wonderful person” and the decision was made in consultation with his wife and family.
The number 20 will be retired at all levels, including the men’s and women’s first teams and academy squads.
A statement said: “It was the number he wore with pride and distinction, leading us to countless victories in the process – and Diogo Jota will forever be Liverpool Football Club’s number 20.”
The club called it a “recognition of not only the immeasurable contribution our lad from Portugal made to the Reds’ on-pitch successes over the last five years, but also the profound personal impact he had on his teammates, colleagues and supporters and the everlasting connections he built with them”.
Image: Jota’s wife joined Liverpool players to view tributes at Anfield on Friday. Pic: Liverpool FC
Image: Pic: Liverpool FC
Newly-married Jota died alongside his brother when his Lamborghini crashed in northern Spain on 3 July.