Al Qaida issues a death sentence to Prince Harry, after acknowledging that he killed 25 Afghan fighters “in cold blood”

The confession of Prince Harry in his memories In the shadow (Spare) having been responsible for killing 25 Afghan combatants takes its toll on him. “It is not a number that fills me with satisfaction, but it does not embarrass me either,” wrote the son of Charles III, who went so far as to describe the Taliban as “chess pieces”. The events occurred between 2012 and 2013, when the prince was serving with the British army in Afghanistan. Now, his life is in danger, as published by Al Qaida in its magazine One Unmah, which is echoed by ABC. The publication launches poisoned threats against the son of the monarch and urges the Crown to reduce the cost of his security so that they are “Islamic hands that take their just retributionsince crimes do not fall by a statute of limitations and the right men fall after it.”

The text published in One Unmah reproaches the western press for its “arrogant mentality”, for having given more space to the sexual adventures of a teenage Harry than to the episodes of Afghanistan. Bottom photo, the cover of the memoir, whose sales far exceeded more than three million copies in the first days of January.

Jihadist demands continue. They demand that the families of the dead Afghans receive financial compensation channeled through the UN and the Geneva conventions. They talk about Harry, who is called Prince Al-Zanim, as a “racist English man” who is “above humans”. And they add: “He killed 25 Afghan Muslims in cold blood, who were just chess pieces in his eyes.” These facts, they say, reveal “discrimination and love of crime in the genes.”