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The Independent UK
The Independent UK
Tony Jones

Wait for potential reunion between King and Prince Harry continues

Speculation is mounting over a potential reunion between the King and the Duke of Sussex during Prince Harry's brief return to the UK.

It would be their first meeting in over a year, with Harry reportedly open to seeing his father, who has been undergoing cancer treatment since early 2024.

The King is thought to be in London, having travelled from his Balmoral summer residence.

The Duke, meanwhile, is visiting the Centre for Blast Injury Studies at Imperial College London, an institution he has close connections with.

Charles and Harry in happier times during the inaugural Invictus Games in 2014

The duke has been carrying out a string of events since arriving back home on Monday and beginning a four-day working stay by leaving flowers at the final resting place of his grandmother Queen Elizabeth II to mark the third anniversary of her death.

Harry’s visit has reignited commentary about the state of his relationship with senior members of the royal family.

He remains estranged from his older brother the Prince of Wales, who travelled to Cardiff to learn about a pioneering mental health hub on World Suicide Prevention Day, with no prospect of the pair meeting.

In February last year Harry made a transatlantic dash from his Californian home to Britain to see his father following his cancer diagnosis.

Duke of Sussex visit to Centre for Blast Injury Studies

The move showed both sides were willing to put their strained relationship on hold and since then there have been further developments.

Senior aides to Charles and Harry where pictured in the Mail On Sunday during a meeting in London this summer that was reportedly a step towards restoring the relationship between the duke and the royal family.

Harry was all smiles as he arrived at the Centre for Blast Injury Studies in White City, west London, and was pictured with former Army captain David Henson, who served as Team GB captain for the inaugural Invictus Games, founded by the duke for wounded and sick military and veterans.

Mr Henson lost both his legs above the knee after standing on an improvised explosive device in 2011 while clearing a compound in Afghanistan. He went on to gain a PhD in Amputee Biomechanics at Imperial.

Harry opened the Centre for Blast Injury Studies in 2013, which was the forerunner of Imperial’s new centre which was launched a few years ago on its White City campus.

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