EXAMPLES of Omid Scobie’s new book are being urgently pulled from the shelves because the Dutch translation “accidentally named” a member of the royal family, implying they are racist.
The book appears to have wrongly named the Royal and failed to name the person Meghan claimed was racist.
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Meghan Markle claims members of the royal family discussed her son’s skin color
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Omid Scobie says he knows who the mysterious royals are
In an interview with Oprah Winfrey, Prince Harry and Meghan sparked controversy by stating that an unnamed member of the royal family spoke about the color of their son’s skin.
And their friend Omid Scobie’s book Endgame claims Meghan named two members of the royal household who she says took part in “conversations” in private letters she wrote to the king.
However, thousands of copies of the books have now been ordered destroyed in the Netherlands after a translation error meant a member of the royal family was wrongly named.
It comes after Scobie boasted he had knowledge of who the royal racist was.
In an interview with Good Morning, he said: “I know who made the comment about Archie’s skin colour.
“The names were mentioned in the letters between Meghan and Charles that were exchanged after the interview with Oprah.
“We know from sources that Charles was horrified that Meghan felt that way. Those conversations were, and that he wanted, as a representative of the family, to have that conversation with her.
“And that’s why I personally think they were able to move forward with some kind of communication after that. Although they may not agree on that.”
Meghan told Oprah in March 2021 that the troubling comments came up during “several conversations.”
She declined to identify anyone, saying: “I think it would be very damaging to them.”
While promoting his book Spare this year, Harry denied the couple had accused anyone in the royal family of “racism”.
But he suggested there was an “unconscious bias”.
It comes at a time when the book is being criticized for a long list of inconsistencies.
Chief among them is the claim that Princess Diana died in a car crash in Paris in 1997 because her driver was blinded by a “big white flash” from a speeding photographer’s camera.
The book states that Diana’s chauffeur, Henri Paul, was blinded by a “great white flash” from a paparazzi photographer on an overtaking motorcycle.
He is then said to have lost control at sixty-five miles per hour and crashed into a concrete pillar.
This theory was a key part of Mohamed Fayed’s conspiracy claims that Diana and his son Dodi were killed as part of an establishment plot ordered by Prince Philip.
Al Fayed said Secret Service agents blinded the driver of the Mercedes, Paul, with a flashlight and that it was part of a plot to make the accident look like an accident.
French authorities and former Met Police chief Lord Stevens rejected the proposal.
The new book goes on to claim that both William and Harry believe the police investigation into their mother’s death – which places much of the blame for drink-driving on Henri Paul – was a “joke”.
Endgame also claims the palace lied when it said Camilla would not be queen – despite Queen Elizabeth II saying it was her “sincere wish” in 2020.
Scobie also claims the Royal Household’s diversity push is a PR stunt.
But Prince Charles hired Colleen Harris, whose family is from Guyana, as press secretary in 1998 and British-Nigerian Eva Omaghomi as head of community engagement in 2021.
The book also says that Charles made no attempt to repair his relationship with Harry after Megxit – even though Harry was invited to his coronation.
Harry also turned down an offer to spend the anniversary of the Queen’s death at Balmoral with his dad earlier this year.
Endgame is Scobie’s second royal book after the author, dubbed “Meghan’s cheerleader”, wrote the couple’s biography Finding Freedom two years ago.
Despite claims that the Sussexes played no part in Finding Freedom, Meghan’s High Court case last year heard the couple told good stories to Scobie through aides.
A spokesperson for the Dutch publisher told MailOnline: “You’re right, but I can’t talk about the details. However, we received a request to put the title on hold and that’s what we did.”
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Source: HIS Education