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Prince Andrew Limps Away From Disastrous Interview Straight Into N-Word Race Row

The Queen's second son is already facing a barrage of criticism for his Newsnight interview on Saturday night.

Prince Andrew’s interview with Emily Maitlis this weekend has already been widely panned as “disastrous” – and now the royal looks set to be engulfed in a race scandal.

According to Evening Standard columnist Rohan Silva, the Duke of York used the n-word at a Buckingham Palace meeting with him when he was a Downing Street advisor to the tech economy.

Silva, who is of Sri Lankan heritage, says the incident took place during a discussion in 2012 about trade policy, and came as he asked the prince whether the government department responsible for trade “could be doing a better job”.

He alleges Andrew replied: “Well, if you pardon the expression, that really is the n***** in the woodpile.”

Silva told the newspaper the exchange left him “reeling” and that “for a long time afterwards, I kicked myself for not confronting the prince on his choice of words.”

Palace sources issued strong denials to the newspaper, insisting he did not use the phrase and that he never would use such language.

Statista

Yet in a column published also on Monday, Silva recounts another uncomfortable exchange with the prince a year earlier, in which the royal is alleged to have interrupted him during a discussion about the tech economy by saying: “What you have got to remember, is that you’ll never get anywhere by playing the white man.”

Rohan Silva, senior policy advisor to David Cameron, pictured in 2013
Steve Back/Shutterstock
Rohan Silva, senior policy advisor to David Cameron, pictured in 2013

Silva recounts looking up the definition of the phrase, and deciding: “So the point Andrew had been trying to make, I think, was that the government shouldn’t be trying to reform the EU through the slow-moving proper channels, but perhaps be a bit more cunning in forcing through change.”

The revelations come as Andrew faces a barrage of criticism following his television interview about the Jeffrey Epstein sex scandal, with the royal accused of a lack of empathy with the victims.

Andrew’s attempt to set the record straight about his relationship with the convicted sex offender – and to counter allegations he slept with one of Epstein’s groomed teenagers – has been widely condemned for its unsympathetic tone and lack of remorse for the friendship.

Commentators are questioning Andrew’s decision to speak in depth for the first time about the allegations and his 10-year friendship with Epstein, with one calling it an “appalling lack of judgement” and another saying his responses lacked conviction.

A legal expert said being a member of the monarchy did not give the duke a get-out clause from being prosecuted in the US, and he was “unwise” to have given a detailed account of his actions to the media.

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This article exists as part of the online archive for HuffPost India, which closed in 2020. Some features are no longer enabled. If you have questions or concerns about this article, please contact indiasupport@huffpost.com.