Harry given baby romper at first workday - GulfToday

Harry given baby romper at first workday

Prince-Harry-Romper

Prince Harry reacts next to Princess Margriet as she gifts him a baby suit in The Hague on Thursday. Reuters

Prince Harry was given a baby outfit for his son Archie by Princess Margriet of the Netherlands on Thursday as the new dad went back to work to mark a year until the 2020 edition of the Invictus Games he founded for wounded military personnel.

Harry, the Duke of Sussex, said he had “no idea” whether his son, whose birth was announced on Monday, would attend the sporting event in a year’s time - but he now has the baby onesie emblazoned with its logo.

The baby will “put it on,” Harry said, drawing loud cheers from the crowd.

Harry and his wife Meghan announced on Wednesday they had named their newborn, the seventh-in-line to the British throne, Archie Harrison Mountbatten-Windsor.

The prince’s trip to the Netherlands was his first public outing since he appeared before the cameras on Monday to announce the birth and the couple showed off their son before a small group of the media at Windsor Castle on Wednesday.

Harry said that he had “no idea” whether newborn son Archie will attend the 2020 Invictus Games in the Netherlands.

Harry was in the Netherlands for an event marking one year until the Invictus Games, an international sporting event the Duke of Sussex founded for military personnel wounded in action.

His Invictus Games were first held in London in 2014, inspired by his military service, having completed two tours in Afghanistan.

The games, during which veterans take part in sports including wheelchair basketball, sitting volleyball, and indoor rowing, will be held in The Hague next year.

Harry, who was greeted by cheering fans and children in The Hague, mingled with veterans as they practiced in a gymnasium, stopping at one point to try his hand at archery.

Dutch veteran Ronald van Dort, 37, who lost both his legs when he served in Afghanistan in 2008, told Reuters the presence of Prince Harry and his commitment to the Invictus Games were very important to war veterans. “He has served himself, he knows what it’s like”, Van Dort said. “You can’t explain this to an outsider.” The prince told the audience: “Make these games your own, I chose you for a reason, and it wasn’t just because I like the colour orange,” in a reference to the Dutch royal house.

Reuters

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