Prince Harry has stepped down as a patron of Sentebale, a charity he co-founded in 2006 in memory of his late mother, Princess Diana. This decision comes amid allegations of bullying, harassment, sexism, and racism made by the charity's chairperson, Sophie Chandauka, against unnamed members of the board. Harry announced his resignation in a joint statement with Prince Seeiso of Lesotho, with whom he established the charity to support young people affected by HIV and AIDS in Lesotho and Botswana.
Sentebale works in the southern African nations of Lesotho and Botswana and was started to help young people affected by AIDS after Harry spent part of a gap year in 2004 working at an orphanage in Lesotho for children whose parents died of the disease.
Sentebale means “don't forget me” in the Sesotho language, and Harry and Seeiso set it up in memory of their mothers.
Princess Diana was killed in a car crash in Paris in 1997. Seeiso's mother, the former queen of Lesotho, died in 2003.
Sentebale continued some of the work Princess Diana did by supporting AIDS charities and trying to remove stigmas around the disease. Diana visited South Africa to promote AIDS awareness in March 1997, five months before she died.
Sentebale was initially set up to help vulnerable children and young people affected by AIDS with health care services, education and vocational training.
Lesotho, a mountainous kingdom surrounded by South Africa, is one of the worst-affected countries in the world by HIV.
Harry's charity had recently evolved to also address issues of youth health, wealth and climate resilience in southern Africa under Chandauka, and the future direction of the charity was a point of disagreement among its leadership, according to British media reports.
In their statement, Harry and Seeiso said they were in shock at the developments at the charity, where the trustees had asked Chandauka to step down. She refused and filed papers at a British court to prevent her from being removed.
The princes said the trustees were acting in the best interests of Sentebale and had now resigned, and the breakdown in relationships was “devastating.”
Chandauka, a Zimbabwean corporate lawyer, said in her own statement that she had “dared to blow the whistle" about poor governance, abuse of power, bullying, harassment, sexism and racism at the charity, and said there had been a cover-up. Her allegations appeared to be directed at the trustees, but she didn't name anyone or give any details.
The trustees who resigned included Mark Dyer, a longtime mentor of Harry's. One of the other trustees, Kelello Lerotholi, told British television channel Sky News that Chandauka's allegations were surprising and “there was never even a hint” of misconduct by trustees.
Chandauka said that she had reported some of the board members to the UK's Charity Commission, where Sentebale is registered
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