Since the death of Princess Diana, Harry's mother, in 1997, Winfrey's television interview with the couple, Harry and Megan, has sparked the royal family's biggest crisis when the family, led by Queen Elizabeth, was widely criticized for its delay in commenting.

It comes after fiery statements and accusations of racism made by former US actress Meghan Markle and her husband Prince Harry, during a media interview with Oprah Winfrey, the British royal family decided to remain silent without any official reaction.

In the two-hour interview, initially broadcast by CBS America on Sunday evening, Harry said his father was heir to the throne, Prince Charles.

On leaving a church vaccination centre in London, a journalist asked Prince Charles what he thought of the interview, and Charles stopped, looked up, turned around and walked without comment.

The Daily Mirror wrote on its front page saying, "Worst property crisis in 85 years," and the Daily Mail asked on its cover, "What have they done?" The Sun columnist Trevor Kavanaugh questioned whether the interview meant "the end" of the royal family.

In a major article entitled "A Royal Attack," The Times said, "It can be no more harmful to the royal family, especially since it can do little to defend itself."

She added: "The key to the survival of the monarchy over the centuries has been its ability to adapt to the demands of the ages. It has to adapt again. "

According to a royal source, 94-year-old Queen Elizabeth, who had held the throne for 69 years, wanted some time before the palace issued a response.

Markle, whose remarkable wedding people followed at Windsor Palace three years ago, won sympathy in the United States after calling some members of the royal family "indifferent," lying and making racist statements, without specifying who.

Her and her husband's relationship with the British press, especially the tabloids that criticized them, was also nervous.

As for the monarchy that has stretched in Britain's history over the course of a thousand years since William the Conqueror, the bomb that Markle detonated is as fierce as the death of Princess Diana and the death of King Edward VIII in 1936.

A spokesman for the British Prime Minister, Boris Johnson, said Tuesday that the latter had seen the interview but had refrained from making any comments.

Johnson had said, Monday, that "it was the Queen's greatest appreciation, but he didn't want to talk about the interview." For her part, New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said that "it is unlikely that Queen Elizabeth will remain Queen of New Zealand any time soon."

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