South African columnist Aspasia Karras pokes fun at Prince Harry in a column on Sunday

South African columnist Aspasia Karras pokes fun at Prince Harry in a column on Sunday

Many people throughout the world made fun of the decision to have Prince Harry speak at the UN event honouring Nelson Mandela, including a South African tabloid that cynically equated the prince’s situation to that of the civil rights hero.

The Nelson Mandela Foundation, a nonprofit owned by Mandela’s family, asked Harry to address the UN in New York City.

He was accompanied by his wife Meghan, who was wearing an expensive designer suit that cost about $3,000.

Harry lectured the small audience during his 15-minute address on topics like climate change, false information, the conflict in Ukraine, COVID, and the Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe v. Wade.

Although he may have declined the chance to contrast himself with Mandela, South African publication The Sunday Times seized the moment.

Before Harry spoke, Editor-at-Large Aspasia Karras stated in a Sunday column: “He’s in exile. similar to Madiba.

“No, sorry, of course, he was held on Robben Island for 27 years.” same, or similar.

A podcast schedule and a documentary crew are following Harry about as he is imprisoned in his luxurious pleasure house in Montecito.

He’s been through a lot, just like Mandela, she continued, calling him the “self-styled Duke of L.A.”

His family and the British press have been treating him and his gorgeous wife Meghan so poorly, as he revealed to Oprah in his cri du coeur interview.

They only wanted to stand in for others. And give the old-fashioned palace some fast-paced LA management style.

What do you know? They simply had to go. It became too much to handle.

Given how efficient the UN is in promoting world peace, I believe Harry is a wonderful fit.

On this significant day, when we remember the sacrifices Mandela made for all of us and our rights, I’m incredibly happy that he can seize the global spotlight. OK?

But particularly for Harry’s entitlement to a security detail. That’ll demonstrate them,” she wrote.

Some detractors questioned Harry’s selection to deliver a lecture on climate change, given that he frequently flies on a private jet.

He arrived in New York City on Monday with Meghan, who was dressed in more than $3,000 worth of expensive clothing, and declared at the UN that “our planet is on fire.”

It’s unknown if the pair flew in on a private plane to New York City.

Inquiries about the couple’s trip were not immediately answered by either the pair’s representatives or The Nelson Mandela Foundation officials.