Prince Harry's UK Trip Sparks Media Buzz over Whether Meghan and Kids Will Join Him

(FILES) Britain's Duke and Duchess of Sussex, Prince Harry and his wife Meghan hold their baby son Archie as they meet with Archbishop Desmond Tutu (unseen) at the Tutu Legacy Foundation in Cape Town on September 25, 2019. (Photo by HENK KRUGER / POOL / AFP)
(FILES) Britain's Duke and Duchess of Sussex, Prince Harry and his wife Meghan hold their baby son Archie as they meet with Archbishop Desmond Tutu (unseen) at the Tutu Legacy Foundation in Cape Town on September 25, 2019. (Photo by HENK KRUGER / POOL / AFP)
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Prince Harry's UK Trip Sparks Media Buzz over Whether Meghan and Kids Will Join Him

(FILES) Britain's Duke and Duchess of Sussex, Prince Harry and his wife Meghan hold their baby son Archie as they meet with Archbishop Desmond Tutu (unseen) at the Tutu Legacy Foundation in Cape Town on September 25, 2019. (Photo by HENK KRUGER / POOL / AFP)
(FILES) Britain's Duke and Duchess of Sussex, Prince Harry and his wife Meghan hold their baby son Archie as they meet with Archbishop Desmond Tutu (unseen) at the Tutu Legacy Foundation in Cape Town on September 25, 2019. (Photo by HENK KRUGER / POOL / AFP)

The drama that seems to surround Prince Harry returns to the UK this week, and the previews already have the British press buzzing with anticipation.

King Charles III’s wayward son is traveling to the land of his birth for a series of charity engagements that begin Tuesday. But for most royal watchers that’s just background noise.

For the past 10 days, British tabloids and news broadcasts have been filled with speculation about whether Harry’s wife, Meghan, will accompany him and, more importantly, whether they will bring their two children, Prince Archie and Princess Lilibet, so they can finally get to know Grandpa Charles. But everything is up in the air as Harry seeks to arrange protection for his family after a government committee refused to authorize taxpayer funded security.

“With just days to go until Harry’s first public engagement in the UK on Tuesday ... very little is guaranteed at all,” the Times of London reported on Saturday. “For Archie and Lilibet to meet the king, it’s now or never,’’ wrote the Telegraph.

The kids' trip hinges on adequate security measures Harry, a British army veteran who served in Afghanistan, planned the visit to mark a year before the Invictus Games, the Paralympic-style competition he founded to motivate and inspire military veterans around the world as they work to overcome battlefield injuries.

Not on the official schedule but very much in the media spotlight, however, is a decision Tuesday at the High Court in London, where the judge will reveal his verdict in Harry’s invasion of privacy lawsuit against the publisher of the Daily Mail.

The decision about whether to bring the children, according to reports based on off-the-record briefings and unidentified people close to the royals, hinges on whether the UK government agrees to provide security for Harry and his family. It is an issue that has hung over every trip the prince has made to Britain since he and Meghan decamped to North America six years ago, The Associated Press reported.

British authorities say Harry isn’t entitled to blanket protection because he is no longer a working member of the royal family and they will assess his security on a case-by-case basis, just like any other celebrity. Harry says it is unsafe for his children to travel to Britain without protection because his family remains a target simply by virtue of their royal status.

The decision rests with a government committee known as Ravec, that rules on who should get state-funded protection.

The outcome could be problematic for the royal family, which is trying to show that it provides value for money after months of embarrassing headlines about the links between the late financier and convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein and the former Prince Andrew, now known as Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor.

“In the paranoid atmosphere of waiting for more Andrew shoes to drop, Ravec and the royals themselves are terrified of public blowback if taxpayers are asked to fund protection for the House of Sussex,’’ royal commentator Tina Brown wrote on X. “The issue is not a hill that either the king or the government wants to die on, and who can blame them?’’

After initial reports that Archie, 7, and Lilibet, 5, would visit the UK, plans began to wobble after the Daily Telegraph reported that Ravec had again rejected Harry’s request for protection.

The Times of London reported that Harry was “distraught” after the decision and told friends he wouldn’t let his children be “chased by paparazzi” through the streets of London.

By Sunday, it was clear that the family wouldn’t accompany Harry when he arrives in the capital on Monday, though there was still a chance they would join him later in the trip.

Nonetheless, Harry has said that he wants to reconcile with his 77-year-old father, who is being treated for an undisclosed form of cancer. And he really wants his children, who first met the monarch during celebrations for the late Queen Elizabeth II’s Platinum Jubilee in 2022, to spend time with their grandfather now that they are old enough to remember the experience.

Tension within the House of Windsor have been strained ever since Harry and Meghan gave up royal duties and moved to California to pursue lucrative media deals free from the pressures of royal life in London.

They reached a new low after Harry published an explosive memoir that included unflattering depictions of the royal family and damning allegations of a toxic relationship between the monarchy and the press.

Harry’s description of royals leaking information about other members of the family in exchange for positive coverage of themselves is just one of the tawdry allegations in his book, “Spare.” The prince was especially scathing about Queen Camilla, accusing her of feeding private conversations to the media as she sought to rehabilitate her image, after her longtime affair with Charles when he was heir to the throne.

After losing a court battle over the security issue last year, Harry said he hoped to rebuild relations with his family, even as he suggested that the royals had sought to prevent him from receiving police protection to punish him for walking away from royal duties.

“I would love reconciliation with my family. There’s no point in continuing to fight anymore,” Harry told the BBC. “I don’t know how much longer my father has.”



Oldest Quasars Ever Discovered Add to ‘Perplexing’ Space Mystery

Multiple images of a distant quasar are visible in this undated combined view from NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory and the Hubble Space Telescope. (Reuters/NASA handout via Reuters)
Multiple images of a distant quasar are visible in this undated combined view from NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory and the Hubble Space Telescope. (Reuters/NASA handout via Reuters)
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Oldest Quasars Ever Discovered Add to ‘Perplexing’ Space Mystery

Multiple images of a distant quasar are visible in this undated combined view from NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory and the Hubble Space Telescope. (Reuters/NASA handout via Reuters)
Multiple images of a distant quasar are visible in this undated combined view from NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory and the Hubble Space Telescope. (Reuters/NASA handout via Reuters)

The Euclid space telescope has spotted the oldest quasars -- the brightest objects in the universe -- ever discovered, deepening a cosmic mystery that has been puzzling scientists.

Quasars are powered by supermassive black holes at the heart of early galaxies gobbling up surrounding matter in a colossal feeding frenzy that can shine trillions of times brighter than the Sun.

Because they are so incredibly bright -- and looking deep into space also means looking back in time -- scientists have been hunting for ancient quasars to learn more about the little-understood infancy of the universe.

In a study published on Monday, an international team of astronomers announced they had discovered 31 quasars, including the two oldest observed yet, using the European Space Agency's Euclid telescope, which is at a stable hovering spot around 1.5 million kilometers from Earth.

The light from the oldest pair comes from when the universe was roughly 670 million years old, just five percent of its current age of 13.8 billion years.

This beats the team's previous record for oldest -- and therefore most distant -- quasar announced in 2021 by around 20 million years.

Previous quasar hunts were mostly carried out with ground-based telescopes, but the launch of Euclid in 2023 "has transformed this field," Daming Yang, the lead author of the study in Astronomy & Astrophysics, told AFP.

In just two years, Euclid has doubled the number of ancient quasars known to science, added Yang, a PhD student at Leiden University in the Netherlands.

- Cosmic quandary -

The newly discovered quasars date back to what is known as the epoch of reionization. This when the first stars and galaxies began to form, bringing an end to the cosmic dark ages.

"We can use quasars as a lighthouse to study the gas between us and them, so that we can trace how the universe was reionized through this cosmic history," Daming Yang said.

The quasars are also the latest example of a problem that has been increasingly baffling scientists.

As more powerful telescopes allow us to see further back in time, galaxies and other cosmic objects have turned out to be far bigger than had been thought possible at such an early age.

"Every step further back in time makes the puzzle more perplexing," study co-author Joseph Hennawi said in a statement about the newly discovered quasars.

"These monsters -- weighing billions of times the mass of our Sun -- somehow already existed when the universe was in its infancy," he said.

"We don't yet have a good understanding of how they grew so massive, so fast."

Hoping to find an answer, the scientists are searching for even older quasars.

The far-seeing James Webb space telescope also recently observed the newly announced quasars, Daming said, and the team will soon begin sifting through the data it collected.

The team eventually hope to stitch together "a quasar chronicle of the first billion years," Hennawi said.


Anissa Helou’s New Book of Recipes from Lebanon Spotlights Villages Scarred by War

Anissa Helou, 74, one of the Middle East's most acclaimed cooks and food writers, holds her new book during a ceremony at the Lebanese Ministry of Tourism, in Beirut, Lebanon, Tuesday, June 23, 2026. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla)
Anissa Helou, 74, one of the Middle East's most acclaimed cooks and food writers, holds her new book during a ceremony at the Lebanese Ministry of Tourism, in Beirut, Lebanon, Tuesday, June 23, 2026. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla)
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Anissa Helou’s New Book of Recipes from Lebanon Spotlights Villages Scarred by War

Anissa Helou, 74, one of the Middle East's most acclaimed cooks and food writers, holds her new book during a ceremony at the Lebanese Ministry of Tourism, in Beirut, Lebanon, Tuesday, June 23, 2026. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla)
Anissa Helou, 74, one of the Middle East's most acclaimed cooks and food writers, holds her new book during a ceremony at the Lebanese Ministry of Tourism, in Beirut, Lebanon, Tuesday, June 23, 2026. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla)

Before becoming one of the Middle East’s most acclaimed cooks and food writers, Anissa Helou had no intention of either path. She entered the world of cooking and writing almost by accident when she was in her late 30s.

Now 74, Helou has a wide following in the region and elsewhere and has released nearly a dozen books since the 1990s about food in the Middle East and beyond. Last month she received Britain’s prestigious Guild of Food Writers Lifetime Achievement Award.

The daughter of a Lebanese mother and a Syrian father, Helou was born into a Christian family and grew up watching her mother, grandmother and paternal aunt cooking. It opened her eyes to the food traditions of the two countries, both widely known in the region for their varied and flavorful cuisine.

“I was always fascinated by the kitchen, by their movements (and) by how they put things together, by the chopping,” Helou said about her mentors. “I love being in the kitchen with them and of course I loved eating.”

Helou’s latest book, “Lebanon: Cooking the Foods of My Homeland,” was officially released in late June in Beirut in a ceremony at Lebanon's Tourism Ministry attended by scores of people including food critics and restaurant owners.

The book, which comes as the country has been battered by two wars in the past three years between Israel and Hezbollah, includes a section about food in some of the southern Lebanese villages that have suffered the worst destruction, The Associated Press reported.

During her repeated visits there, most recently in October 2023, she found residents had their own regional variations of traditional cuisine. They include mujadara, a dish mainly consisting of lentils that is often cooked with rice, but in southern Lebanon is more likely to be made with bulgur.

“I discovered more, like, variations and added dishes, rather than something that was a complete revelation,” Helou said.

She has picked walnuts from a tree growing along the giant wall separating southern Lebanon from northern Israel and met residents who have lost their homes and businesses in the Hezbollah-Israel conflict.

Helou recalled Moussa Ibrahim from the southern village of Dibbine, which has been the site of intense clashes between Israeli troops and Hezbollah fighters.

Fighting there in 2024 caused Ibrahim to lose his business producing mouneh: vegetables, fruits, grains and dairy preserved with traditional Lebanese techniques including sun-drying, salting, pickling or submerging in olive oil.

Representing the Middle East and Muslims through recipes Helou, who has traveled the world to sample food, said she loves Korean and Japanese in addition to Middle Eastern cuisine.

“Lebanese, Iranian and Moroccan are among the greatest cuisines,” Helou said earlier this month in her late mother's apartment in the Mount Lebanon town of Ballouneh.

“Lebanese cuisine is kind of a little bit more sophisticated, a lot fresher, more vibrant” compared with some other Middle East food, Helou said as she prepared a traditional Lebanese lamb confit called awarma.

Asked for the home of the region’s best food, Helou did not hesitate to move outside Lebanon and name Syria’s largest city, Aleppo.

Famed for its centuries-old covered market, which was badly damaged during Syria’s civil war beginning in March 2011, Aleppo is known for varied and elaborate cuisine with influences from Persia, North Africa and Armenia.

“I think that Aleppo is undoubtedly the gastronomic capital of the Middle East, regardless of me being Syrian,” she said.

Global anti-Islamic sentiments rose dramatically after ISIS took large parts of Syria and Iraq and declared a so-called caliphate in 2014, launching deadly attacks in the region and the world.

Helou responded with a book of about 300 recipes of dishes from Muslim countries.

“I was thinking, one way of presenting Islam and Muslim people positively could be through their foods,” she said.

Starting late in the world of cooking Helou, who left Lebanon at the age of 21, holds citizenship in Lebanon, Syria and the United Kingdom and has spent much of her time in Britain and Italy. She still regularly visits Lebanon, cooking and asking people how they make specific dishes.

Helou refused to cook for years while she was a young woman and told her partner at the time not to expect her to make meals.

“I didn’t want to be domesticated. I was like a feminist and so I didn’t cook for a very long time,” she said.

One day a friend prepared a meal at their home and Helou saw the happiness it gave her partner, prompting her to think she should start cooking.

Her decision to become a food writer came in 1992 when a discussion with a group of Lebanese living abroad gave Helou the idea of filling a gap in Lebanese cookbooks with a collection of her mother's recipes. As it happened, there was a publisher looking for someone to write such a book.

“That’s how I started, by sheer coincidence,” Helou said.


Experts Urge Caution as Demand Grows for AC in Heatwave-Hit UK

Air conditioning units are pictured during hot day in Magdeburg, Germany, 26 June 2026. The German Weather Service forecasted strong to extreme heat stress in large parts of the country. (EPA)
Air conditioning units are pictured during hot day in Magdeburg, Germany, 26 June 2026. The German Weather Service forecasted strong to extreme heat stress in large parts of the country. (EPA)
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Experts Urge Caution as Demand Grows for AC in Heatwave-Hit UK

Air conditioning units are pictured during hot day in Magdeburg, Germany, 26 June 2026. The German Weather Service forecasted strong to extreme heat stress in large parts of the country. (EPA)
Air conditioning units are pictured during hot day in Magdeburg, Germany, 26 June 2026. The German Weather Service forecasted strong to extreme heat stress in large parts of the country. (EPA)

Londoner Zainab Hussain once saw air conditioning as a luxury in Britain. Now, the 35-year-old "can't see how we'll survive without it".

She and her husband are among a small but growing proportion of British households embracing AC to deal with increasingly hot summers.

But the trend has attracted criticism, particularly from sustainability experts who argue it should not be the "default answer".

"It's seen as a quick fix and it's not actually, because it can cause a lot of damage," Rajat Gupta, professor of sustainable architecture and climate change at Oxford Brookes University, told AFP.

He noted AC increases electricity demand, energy bills and carbon emissions, while worsening the so-called urban heat island effect by releasing hot air onto city streets.

However, after sweltering at night through the second heatwave of 2026 last month, the Hussain family were undeterred, opting to add AC upstairs at their semi-detached home in the south London suburb Selsdon.

"We realized that our summers were just getting more and more unbearable, so it was something that we definitely needed to have for the downstairs area," Hussain explained.

"But after last week's heatwave, we realized that actually upstairs was really unbearable as well," she added, as workers fitted the new appliance.

- Wanted 'now' -

Only around 5 percent of British homes have AC while half overheat during the summer months, according to a 2025 report by the non-partisan Centre for British Progress think tank.

Urging more AC adoption, it cited the growing risks from heat-related deaths -- which number in the low thousands each summer -- and lost productivity.

Such calls have increased as UK temperature records tumble.

For the second successive year, England last month experienced its warmest June since records began in 1884.

Meanwhile all of Britain's five warmest summers have occurred in the 21st century, with last year the hottest.

Scientists say human-induced climate change is making such weather more frequent and intense.

For AC installer Joe Springett, who has worked in the industry nearly two decades, the rising mercury has triggered a gradual shift in his business away from offices and retailers.

"I'm getting busier and busier domestically, where people want it in their houses," the 35-year-old told AFP while fitting Hussain's new unit.

"It happens every year. As soon as the [hot] weather comes, bang! The phone's ringing ... everyone wants it now."

After the latest heatwave, Springett was booked up for several weeks and has been struggling to find stock.

Those without the outside space or budget -- appliances can cost several thousand pounds, including installation -- are instead ordering more basic, portable units.

Retailers' websites are now showing such items as sold-out.

Home improvement store B&Q told AFP it has seen twice as many searches for portable AC units this year compared to 2025.

- 'Only when necessary' -

Gupta is dismayed at the "panic buying", arguing "the most sustainable approach is to look at improving buildings to stay cool naturally".

He advocates retrofitting buildings with exterior and interior shading, better ventilation and other "green-ing" measures, alongside improved heat-resilience design for new-builds.

AC should be reserved for the most vulnerable, such as those in care home and hospital settings.

"In homes, it hasn't become widespread yet, and it's better to keep it that way," Gupta said. "Use it only when necessary and where necessary."

In the UK, AC running costs can vary widely depending on numerous factors, including the type and efficiency of the system and how often it is used.

But some estimates suggest more powerful units can add hundreds of pounds to monthly bills.

John Calautit, a sustainability lecturer at University College London (UCL), is another AC sceptic.

He noted most British buildings are designed to retain warmth and "cannot cope" with heatwave conditions.

"We need to look at more simple solutions such as adding shading ... reflective materials and then moving on to natural ventilation," he told AFP.

"If those solutions do not work, then we can start looking at mechanical cooling systems."

Back in south London, Springett argues Britons have "got to move with the times, the climate" and adopt AC.

For Hussain's family, whose home has south-facing windows exposed to direct sunlight throughout the day, it seemed the only option.

"We spend so much more time at home now, especially with remote working, it's not just about it being comfortable. We need to be able to function in the house."