Harry protected gay soldier: Book
Britain’s Prince Harry intervened to prevent a soldier under his command being beaten up in a homophobic attack, according to a new book.
Trooper James Wharton, who is openly gay, writes that he was confronted by “six extremely angry infantry sergeants” who accused him of spreading rumours about one of their soldiers. According to a report in the Sunday Times, Wharton was serving as a gunner in the Household Cavalry during a training exercise in Canada when he told the prince he was “about to be murdered”.
“I climbed into the turret and talked Harry through exactly what had happened,” he writes in his book Out in the Army. “I didn’t hold back, I told him everything that had gone on. I couldn’t stop the tears welling up in my eyes. He said: “Right, I’m going to sort this s*** out once and for all. Harry climbed out of the tank and started having a go. I worried he was about to make the whole thing worse, but he wasn’t holding back. Prince Harry was sticking up for me and putting a stop to the trouble. I had been on track for a battering and had been rescued. He came back 10 minutes later and told me the problem had been ‘sorted’,” he adds.
Wharton came to public attention in 2009, a year after the incident, when he became the first openly gay solder to appear on the cover of Soldier, the official Buckingham Palace decli-ned to comment on the cla-ims in the book. — PTI
Post new comment