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It’s a challenge faced by countless parents the length and breadth of the country - and it’s one that Harry and Meghan are facing this week. Prince Harry will be in Britain on Thursday,
September 7 for the WellChild awards, a day before the Windsors join the nation to mark 12 months since Queen Elizabeth II died. His wife Meghan Markle will not be joining him. But,
according to the Telegraph, the reason behind this is a simple and relatable one: childcare. Harry and Meghan have two children - Prince Archie, who is four, and two-year-old Princess
Lilibet. After his trip to the UK Harry will then travel to Germany for the Invictus Games where Meghan will join him. Their appearance at the Invictus closing ceremony on September 16 will
be their first public appearance together since May. Meanwhile royal biographer Robert Jobson spoke to True Royalty TV's The Royal Beat ahead of the 2023 Invictus Games in Dusseldorf.
Mr Jobson claims that Harry hates that his honorary military titles were stripped when when he and Meghan stepped down from royal duties. He said: “It's great that he is doing these
things but [the King] would probably like him to have stayed in an organisation like the army or the armed forces… “I just think that if he'd been supported in that way, he would be
doing so many things for the Royal Family now that he would have probably enjoyed. "He hates the idea that he is not Captain General of the Royal Marines…and he hates the fact that
he's lost all these positions. “If he'd been in the Royal Family, and not gone down this path, I think he'd have been hugely beneficial to the country, and he could have done
even more." But the expert said that King Charles would be proud of what his son has achieved with the games - a Paralympic-style sporting competition for injured and sick military
personnel and veterans which he set up in 2014. Prince Harry's return to the UK has reportedly raised fears among members of the Royal Family he will draw attention away from the one
year anniversary of Queen Elizabeth II's death. Writer and broadcaster Esther Krakue told Sky News Australia that Harry's presence in the UK poses a threat to the royals. She said:
"One of the concerns that him being here (in London) - him giving that speech at the WellChild Awards, might move attention away from the one year anniversary of the Queen’s passing to
whatever antics that Prince Harry has going on.”