Harry and Meghan visit refugee camp as part of Middle East trip

Thomas Mackintosh
PA Media The Duchess of Sussex meets Maria, a 14-year-old burn victim from Gaza, during a visit to the Specialty Hospital in AmmanPA Media
The Duke and Duchess of Sussex met Maria, a 14-year-old burn victim from Gaza, during a visit to the Speciality Hospital in Amman

The Duke and Duchess of Sussex met children at a refugee camp and a hospital in Jordan as part of a two-day tour.

Prince Harry and Meghan arrived in the Middle Eastern country on Wednesday where they will be highlighting efforts to support vulnerable communities affected by conflict and displacement.

The couple, who stepped down as working royals in 2020, have travelled to Amman at the invitation of Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, director-general of the World Health Organization (WHO).

Their visit comes at time of crisis for the Royal Family following the arrest of Harry's uncle, Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, on suspicion of misconduct in public office.

Harry and Meghan arrived in Amman on Wednesday morning for their first international tour together in 18 months, and were warmly greeted by Ghebreyesus on the steps of WHO's country office in the Jordanian capital.

Once inside, the couple joined a discussion hosted by the WHO with individuals from leading bodies including the United Nations and many of its agencies, diplomatic representatives, and donors.

PA Media The Duke and Duchess of Sussex attend a World Health Organization roundtable with key donors and humanitarian partners in AmmanPA Media
During their trip, Meghan and Harry will support the WHO's efforts to spotlight Jordan's leadership in the regional humanitarian health response

After the meeting, the couple travelled north of Amman to the sprawling Za'atari Refugee Camp, where families live in semi-permanent homes with a few shops available.

They toured a youth centre run by the social development organisation Questscope. It provides a number of activities from art and photography classes to music and sport, to engage the youngsters and help alleviate mental health issues.

PA Media The Duke and Duchess of Sussex listen to a music class during a visit to the QuestScope Youth Center at the Za'atari refugee campPA Media
The Duke and Duchess of Sussex applauded after listening to a music class during a visit to the Za'atari refugee camp in Jordan
BBC Food The Duchess of Sussex kicks a ball while girls look on from the view of inside an astro turf pitch.BBC Food
The Duchess of Sussex scored while her husband saw his effort saved

Harry and Meghan played football, visited a number of classrooms, observed teenage girls playing traditional Arabic instruments and in another space, more musicians performed with violins and guitars.

Over the next two days, Harry and Meghan are set to meet Jordanian leaders and senior health officials.

They are expected to engage with WHO teams, visit front line health and mental health programmes and meet World Central Kitchen staff who are co-ordinating food relief for Gaza from Amman.

Philip Hall, British Ambassador to Jordan, thanked the Sussexes for travelling to the Middle East.

"Your visit, your support, your appreciation of the efforts that the United Nations, including of course, the World Health Organization, the government of Jordan and others, are making here is enormously appreciated," Hall said.

PA Media The Duke and Duchess of Sussex attended a World Health Organization round-table event with key donors and humanitarian partnersPA Media
The Duke and Duchess of Sussex attended a WHO roundtable event with key donors and humanitarian partners

The Sussexes will also visit the social development organisation Questscope's youth centre to hear from young people participating in creative and wellbeing programmes.

They are expected to see initiatives they have helped fund to medically evacuate children from the war in Gaza to the Middle East nation.

PA Media The Duke and Duchess of Sussex met with violinistsPA Media
The Duke and Duchess of Sussex met with violinists

In September, Prince Harry's Archewell Foundation announced it would donate $500,000 (£370,000) to projects - including the WHO - to help develop prosthetic limbs and provide other support for children from Gaza and Ukraine.

The foundation's three grants included $200,000 (£148,000) to the WHO to support medical evacuations from Gaza to Jordan, and $150,000 (£111,000) to the Save the Children charity to provide humanitarian support in Gaza.

The third grant of $150,000 was to the Centre of Blast Injury Studies to help its efforts to develop prostheses that can support injured children, particularly those injured from the conflicts in Ukraine and Gaza.

The couple first partnered with the WHO on a global campaign to encourage vaccine equity and co-hosted a high-level event at the UN General Assembly in 2021, and their charitable body has also worked with the organisation on its global initiative to help end violence against children.

Since moving to California in 2020 for a new life the Sussexes have carried out a number of foreign visits that have taken a similar form to the official trips they made when still part of the Royal Family.

The couple's last tour - a four-day trip to Colombia in August 2024 - saw them visit a school in capital Bogotá to talk to teenagers about the impact of social media.

Harry and Meghan also spoke at a summit on digital responsibility staged in part by their Archewell Foundation. Earlier that year, the couple visited Nigeria to mark 10 years of the Invictus Games.

Harry's trip to the Middle East comes weeks after his brother, the Prince of Wales, visited Saudi Arabia where he met young female footballers in Riyadh.

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