Ingrid Seward, a veteran royal correspondent, said that the 67-year-old heir to Britain's throne was "fatalistic" about the possibility that a gunman would take a shot as he followed Princess Diana's coffin to Westminster Abbey after she was killed in a car crash in Paris, 'The Times' reports.
"Prince Charles was extremely nervous because he was public enemy number one," Seward told the audience yesterday during the Henley Literary Festival at Henley-on-Thames.
Dickie Arbiter, press secretary to Queen Elizabeth II at the time, spoke alongside Seward and said the prince knew many people blamed him for the collapse of his marriage, but the real reasons were complex.
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Seward added that public scrutiny of royal behaviour was worse because of Twitter and camera phones today.
She suggested the relationship between Prince Harry and Cressida Bonas, which ended in 2014, was strained because of the exposure.
"I think it's actually evil in a way. Cressie, the most gorgeous girl, said it was awful because every time she walked down the street she could hear people criticising her," she said.
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