Royals

Meghan Markle received “disgusting” threats while living in the UK

The threats were "very real".
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While living in the United Kingdom as a senior working royal, Meghan Markle received numerous “disgusting” threats, according to former counter terror chief Neil Basu.

In an interview with Channel 4 News, Neil claimed the police investigated a lot of threats targeting the Duchess of Sussex which were “very real.”

(Image: Getty)

When asked if the threats were credible, he responded: “Absolutely, and if you’d seen the stuff that was written and you were receiving it… the kind of rhetoric that’s online, if you don’t know what I know, you would feel under threat all of the time.”

“We had teams investigating it. People have been prosecuted for those threats.”

These claims relate to Prince Harry’s previous comments noting he did not feel safe with his young family in the UK.

In the final episode of Meghan’s Archetypes podcast, the duchess revealed her life had enough “drama”.

(Image: Getty)

“I stopped watching the housewives when my life had its own level of drama, that I stop craving [other people’s drama],” Meghan said.

“I get why it was such a huge, huge part of pop culture and when it began, because you began with Orange County and I’m from California, at least it felt remotely like a world that I knew but still felt so foreign.”

It is yet to be confirmed as to whether there will be a second season of the Spotify podcast. But fans are curious as to what the potential season could uncover as this season explored gender issues and diversity.

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In the final episode, Meghan addressed the lack of male presence on the podcast aside from her husband Prince Harry’s initial comments in the first episode.

“And that’s by design. It was important to us that women have a space to share their authentic and complicated, complex and dynamic experiences. To be heard. And to be understood,” she said.

“But through that process, it also occurred to me — and truth be told, at the suggestion of my husband — that if we really want to shift how we think about gender and the limiting labels that we separate people into, then we have to broaden the conversation… and we have to actively include men in that conversation and certainly in that effort.”

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