logo
The shocking scandals behind the Monaco throne as Prince Albert and Princess Charlene celebrate their wedding anniversary

The shocking scandals behind the Monaco throne as Prince Albert and Princess Charlene celebrate their wedding anniversary

Daily Mail​6 hours ago

He might be the leader of the smallest Kingdom in Europe but the reign of Prince Albert II Monaco has seen its fair share of scandals and controversies.
Today is Prince Albert's 14th wedding anniversary - when he tied the knot with the then Charlene Wittstock in two lavish wedding ceremonies that cost a combined total £53million.
With a glittering 850-strong guest list that included Sir Roger Moore and Prince Edward, the religious ceremony on July 2 followed the civil nuptials a day earlier.
At the latter, Charlene stunned in an off-the-shoulder Armani dress boasting a six-metre train and studded with 40,000 Swarovski crystals and 20,000 mother of pearl tear drops.
But even on their wedding day, the controversies that tend to follow the Monegasque Royal Family appeared.
The couple's uneasy kiss - and the fact that at one moment Charlene was in tears - perhaps betrayed the trouble that had already taken place and the further angst that was to come.
Days before the big day, rumours began to circulate that Charlene had tried to flee the country on three occasions with a one-way ticket to Johannesburg.
A Parisian news magazine reported that Charlene had been stopped at Nice airport after allegedly learning a 'distressing' revelation about her future husband's private life.
Charlene and Albert wait to met Pope Leo XIV in May. Despite their fair share of scandals, Prince Albert and Princess Charlene remain respected among other Royal Families in Europe.
A senior Monaco detective claimed at the time: 'Charlene had her passport confiscated so that the Prince's entourage could persuade her to stay.'
The rumour mill in France went into overdrive. Charlene had, it was suggested, heard talk of an illegitimate child, allegedly conceived when she was dating Prince Albert in 2005.
But the Princess would go on to dismiss the 'hilarious' rumours. She said: 'Why would he go through all this effort to have our dearest friends come join us, for us to be reluctant?'
And they spent the first night of their honeymoon in South Africa - the nation that Zimbabwe-born Charlene represented at the Olympics during her swimming career - in separate hotels.
During his years as a bachelor, Albert was known as the 'playboy prince' due to his string of romantic relationships with models and actresses.
He also fathered several love children - two of which the prince has acknowledged.
Meanwhile, Princess Charlene has been known to disappear from the public eye on multiple occasions, reportedly due to 'deep fatigue'.
The princess took a prolonged medical hiatus in South Africa which saw her spend most of 2021 away from her husband and children.
This meant she missed the seventh birthdays of her twins - Jacques and Gabriella - and her tenth wedding anniversary.
Charlene also travelled to a Swiss clinic that allegedly specialises in mental health and addiction issues.
SInce 2021, Charlene has been seen with the Royal Family.
Albert's questionable financial practises have also been the subject of much scrutiny in recent years with Tatler going as far as to declare there was a chance the monarch might not have survived the scandal last year.
The rumours started in 2023 when Claude Palmero, 68, who looked after the Royal Family's finances (including their investments, their properties and the main palace), was sacked after being targeted by a mysterious anti-corruption website.
A few months later, French newspaper Le Monde published Palmero's 'secret notebooks', which claimed to detail reckless spending by the Royal Family.
It alleged that Albert spends millions every year from a secret French bank account to pay his former mistresses and love children - with Jazmin Grimaldi, 31, and Alexandre Coste-Grimaldi, 20, receiving allowances of £344,000 each.
According to Le Monde, Jazmin, Albert's love child with U.S. estate agent Tamara Rotolo, receives £73,000 every three months - despite not being part of the royal family. Palmero noted she was given £4,200 for her 18th and a flat in New York worth £2.6 million seven years later.
Prince Albert II, Princess Charlene, Prince Jacques and Princess Gabriella during the Army Parade, as part of the official celebrations marking the principality National Day in 2024
He also noted that the palace was paying for kidnap and ransom insurance for Alexandre, 20, Albert's son with former air hostess Nicole Coste. The Prince acknowledged paternity of Alexandre in 2005.
Princess Charlene's own mismanagement of her money was also criticised in the paper.
She was routinely given an allowance of around £1.2 million a year - but still managed to overspend, according to Palmero's notes.
The speed at which the mother-of-two apparently burned through money so worried the Prince's accountant that he wrote in his notes: 'It's crazy! I have no control over the Princess' spending.'
After Albert sacked Palmero he was then questioned by police after Albert filed a lawsuit against him, resulting in an investigation into alleged 'breach of confidentiality, invasion of privacy and receiving the proceeds of two offences'.
After losing his role in the palace, Palmero reportedly filed a lawsuit against the royal family, accusing them of abuse of weakness, attempted extortion and theft. He also contested his dismissal before a tribunal headed by Judge Linotte.
When the president of Monaco's Supreme Court was pushed out, Palmero went to the European Court of Human Rights. He allegedly claimed that it wasn't possible to get a fair hearing in the super-rich principality. The case is still ongoing.
Albert has denied all of Palmero's allegations.
Despite the questions over their financial practises, Prince Albert and Princess Charlene remain respected among other Royal Families in Europe.
In May, the royals joined other Catholic monarchs including the King and Queen of Spain and Belgium for an audience with Pope Leo XIV.
Princess Charlene along with Queen Letizia of Spain and Queen Mathilde of Belgium are allowed to wear white in front of the Pope because of their faith.
They are each one of only seven women in the world who have 'the privilege of the white'.
Called 'le privilege du blanc' in French or 'il privilegio del bianco' in Italian, the special tradition is extended solely to designated Catholic queens and princesses and is reserved for important events at the Vatican, such as private audiences, canonisations, beatifications, and special masses.
Normal protocol for papal audiences requires that ladies wear a long black dress with a high collar and long sleeves and a black mantilla.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Chief Rabbi: BBC airing of vile Jew-hatred is national shame
Chief Rabbi: BBC airing of vile Jew-hatred is national shame

Telegraph

time37 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

Chief Rabbi: BBC airing of vile Jew-hatred is national shame

The Chief Rabbi has criticised the BBC over its response to a rapper who chanted 'death, death to the IDF' at Glastonbury. Bob Vylan, whose real name is Pascal Robinson-Foster, repeated the phrase in a performance that was broadcast live by the BBC. The corporation has expressed regret at not pulling the livestream, with the Culture Secretary claiming the issue should have been foreseeable and constituted 'a problem of leadership' for the broadcaster. But in a post on X, Chief Rabbi Sir Ephraim Mirvis described the incident as a 'time of national shame'. He said: 'This is a time of national shame. The airing of vile Jew-hatred at Glastonbury and the BBC's belated and mishandled response brings confidence in our national broadcaster's ability to treat anti-Semitism seriously to a new low. 'It should trouble all decent people that now, one need only couch their outright incitement to violence and hatred as edgy political commentary, for ordinary people to not only fail to see it for what it is, but also to cheer it, chant it and celebrate it. 'Toxic Jew-hatred is a threat to our entire society.' The Chief Rabbi's comments came as the Campaign Against Antisemitism (CAAS) issued calls for Tim Davie, the BBC's director general, to be sacked following Bob Vylan's set. The campaign group said that if the event was 'not met with the firmest condemnation and recourse, then it is the surest sign yet that Britain is becoming a haven for hatred and unsafe for Jews'. Mr Davie, who was visiting staff at the festival on Saturday afternoon, was informed of the chant shortly after it had been made and ruled that the rap duo's set should not be made available to watch on demand. However, the chant remained on iPlayer for another five hours. Sources stressed that pulling the livestream was not discussed, but a spokesman said that, in hindsight, the BBC regretted that this decision was not taken. A BBC source said: 'Tim was there for a few hours to see the team. He was made aware during the time he was there of what had been said on stage. He intervened to make sure the performance was not made available on demand and he was very clear about that. 'Pulling the livestream brings certain technological challenges. With hindsight, we would have taken it down. He would have asked what the options were, but it isn't as straightforward as hitting a button and taking it down.' Lisa Nandy, the Culture Secretary, suggested that the incident called Mr Davie's position into question. Speaking in the Commons, she said: 'When you have one editorial failure, it's something that must be gripped. When you have several, it becomes a problem of leadership.' Ms Nandy was responding to a question from Peter Prinsley, the MP for Bury St Edmunds and Stowmarket, who said: 'The murder of hundreds of Jews at the Nova music festival in October 2023 sparked this war. The irony of broadcast anti-Semitism at Glastonbury here in the UK is not lost on any of us. 'So how are Jews, such as myself, in this country to be reassured about the editorial processes of the BBC? And who on Earth will be held accountable for this error?' Ms Nandy said accountability was 'an extremely important point' and 'something that I've impressed upon the BBC leadership'. It is the latest anti-Semitism controversy to engulf the BBC. Earlier this year, the corporation was forced to apologise for 'serious flaws' in a documentary about Gaza, which failed to disclose that the narrator was the son of a Hamas official. Its news reporting on Israel-Gaza has also been criticised. Earlier on Monday, Israel's deputy foreign minister called on Mr Davey to step down if no one was fired over the broadcasting of the chant. Sharren Haskel told The Telegraph's Daily T podcast there should be an investigation into why it took the broadcaster so long to remove the hate speech from the BBC iPlayer on Saturday. During their appearance at Glastonbury, Bob Vylan chanted 'Free! Free!' and the crowd responded 'Palestine!', before they led fans in the chant of 'death, death to the IDF'. Pascal Robinson-Foster, the group's frontman, who performs as Bobby Vylan, also ranted about a Jewish record company boss for whom he had worked. The set was not made available on demand, where programmes can be accessed and watched on iPlayer after their live broadcast has finished. However, it was possible to rewind and watch it back before the live broadcast from the stage where Bob Vylan were performing had finished. The corporation said it regretted broadcasting the 'unacceptable' words, adding: 'The anti-Semitic sentiments expressed by Bob Vylan were utterly unacceptable and have no place on our airwaves. We welcome Glastonbury's condemnation of the performance.' Ms Haskel told the Daily T: 'Who's responsible for that? This is literally someone calling for violence, for ethnic cleansing, for the destruction and the annihilation of the only Jewish state in the world. 'So if there's no one that will take responsibility, if no one will be fired over such an outrageous thing, then I think that Tim Davie should take responsibility because there has to be accountability for that.' Asked to clarify whether she was calling for the resignation of the director general, who has been in the post since 2020, she said: 'If there's no one responsible for that, and if no one's going to be fired over such an outrageous thing, Tim Davie should take responsibility and resign.' Ms Haskel also called for an investigation into the BBC's coverage of the Middle East, adding: 'There should be an inquiry regarding the BBC coverage. 'It was fully biased. Many mistakes were made. not just in the coverage since Oct 7, but their coverage in the Middle East in general and also about how they address anti-Semitism in the UK. How is it possible that something like that has been normalised in the UK? I just don't get it.' In a statement, the BBC said: 'Millions of people tuned in to enjoy Glastonbury this weekend across the BBC's output, but one performance within our livestreams included comments that were deeply offensive. 'The BBC respects freedom of expression but stands firmly against incitement to violence. 'The performance was part of a live stream of the West Holts stage on BBC iPlayer. The judgment on Saturday to issue a warning on screen while streaming online was in line with our editorial guidelines. In addition, we took the decision not to make the performance available on demand. 'The team were dealing with a live situation, but with hindsight, we should have pulled the stream during the performance. We regret this did not happen. 'In light of this weekend, we will look at our guidance around live events so we can be sure teams are clear on when it is acceptable to keep output on air.' Ofcom said it would examine the BBC's decision to air the performance. The watchdog said the BBC 'clearly has questions to answer' over how the set was shown live. An Ofcom spokesman said: 'We are very concerned about the livestream of this performance, and the BBC clearly has questions to answer. 'We have been speaking to the BBC over the weekend and we are obtaining further information as a matter of urgency, including what procedures were in place to ensure compliance with its own editorial guidelines.' A spokesperson for Avon and Somerset Police added: 'Video footage and audio from Bob Vylan and Kneecap's performances at Glastonbury Festival on Saturday has been reviewed. Following the completion of that assessment process we have decided further enquiries are required and a criminal investigation is now being undertaken. A senior detective has been appointed to lead this investigation. This has been recorded as a public order incident at this time while our enquiries are at an early stage. The investigation will be evidence-led and will closely consider all appropriate legislation, including relating to hate crimes.' Avon and Somerset Police also began a review of footage of the set to determine whether any criminal offences were committed. Sir Keir Starmer has condemned the incident as 'appalling hate speech', while the organisers of Glastonbury issued a statement in which they said it had 'crossed a line'. On Monday, Bob Vylan were banned The BBC had previously decided it would not allow a performance by Kneecap to be broadcast as part of the livestream after the pro-Palestinian Northern Irish rappers became embroiled in a separate controversy. Liam O'Hanna, a member of the group, has been charged with a terror offence after a flag showing support for Hezbollah was allegedly displayed at one of the band's gigs in London. He denies wrongdoing. An edited version of Kneecap's performance was subsequently made available by the BBC on its iPlayer platform.

Love Island's Laura Anderson reveals parenting ‘struggle' in candid post – and admits ‘I don't know who my daughter is'
Love Island's Laura Anderson reveals parenting ‘struggle' in candid post – and admits ‘I don't know who my daughter is'

The Sun

time37 minutes ago

  • The Sun

Love Island's Laura Anderson reveals parenting ‘struggle' in candid post – and admits ‘I don't know who my daughter is'

LAURA Anderson has been inundated with messages of support after she revealed her hardest-ever parenting "struggle" - and even admitted "I don't know who my daughter is." The Love Island alum, 36, was eager to share "the truth behind my smiles" as she opened up on navigating life with one-year-old Bonnie. 6 6 6 She told how she "didn't recognise" her young daughter's new behaviour traits and that the issue of disciplining her had resulted in a knock to her self-confidence. Former air hostess Laura shares her daughter with ex Gary Lucy, 43, welcoming the tot in September 2023. Sadly she has often been the target of cruel online trolls, who recently called out her decision to keep her dog - who has bitten her child. They also slammed her for being "out of touch" after she complained about a First Class plane journey with her tot, as well as being mum-shamed for going on holiday with her new man and leaving Bonnie behind. Now the Scot has confessed that her happy snaps of late have been hiding the reality of her feelings. She uploaded a series of snaps showing family days out with the tot at the beach and the circus, sharing special time with her mum, partner and pals. Yet in her lengthy caption she outlined the real deal. Laura wrote to her fans: "These may be images of love, laughter and core memories being made recently but the truth behind the smiles is- I'm struggling. "This has been the hardest week of parenthood so far for me. Bonnie is coming up for 22months and a lot has changed and keeps changing. "I don't know who my daughter is some days, I don't recognise her which has led to my dip in confidence communicating and or disciplining my own child (especially in public). Laura Anderson takes HUGE swipe at Gary Lucy on Father's Day "I'm scared of responding in the wrong way, I'm scared of making a mistake because what if it teaches her long lasting bad behaviours?! "And let's be honest if you grew up in the 80s/90s like me, gentle parenting didn't exist. We got smacked (no offence to my parents) and now it's illegal. So I guess you could say I'm trying to find my place as a mother somewhere in between." Laura continued: "We also talk about the 'juggle' but It's so much more than that. It's the responsibility of choosing a priority every second of the day because we simply can't do it all. "I love my child but this is inevitably the hardest 'job' I've ever had (and I've had a lot of jobs.) Laura Anderson and Gary Lucy's relationship timeline Laura and Gary met when they both appeared on Celebs Go Dating back in 2022 They announced Laura's pregnancy in February 2023 Just one day later, they revealed that they had split Later in 2023, they appeared to have reconciled Laura gave birth to daughter Bonnie in September 2023 They announced shortly afterwards that they were no longer together In June 2024, Lucy was asked if Gary had seen Bonnie, to which she responded: "No he hasn't since 2nd January if you would like to direct those questions to him as I have no control over the actions of others". In August 2024, Gary shared a video of himself with Bonnie With Laura hitting out: "Instead of posting videos of the one time you saw your daughter this year, can you please reply to my text from 2weeks ago please, that would be great". Laura marked Bonnie's birthday in September 2024 as she referenced her "beautiful daughter" When someone asked where her relationship with Gary stands, Laura replied: "No matter what Gary has done and not done I will always respect him as Bonnie's father and I hope one day he is capable of being the father she deserves." " My new mantra though, is- 'show me how good it can get.' "So without wishing my daughter's childhood away or those precious bonding turning point/learning curve moments. I hope 'this' ie tantrums…too shall pass." Fans and fellow parents were quick to react to her no-holds-barred upload. One supportively wrote: "We're all wingin' it." A second urged: "Be kind to yourself and Bonnie. You went away for a week (no shame in that) you've moved house and moved in with your partner and she's started nursery all in the space of a month? That's a lot for anyone to deal with. Once life feels more settled, so will she." A third noted: "Bless your heart, it's hard AF & doesn't get easier as they get older! Hugs sweetie x" One then added: "Love how genuine & honest u are Laura. "Parenthood certainly ain't all plain sailing but you've got this beautiful mama even if it feels like u don't sometimes, that's a normal part of parenthood but u do n ur such a great mammy to beautiful Bonnie." 6 6 6

EXCLUSIVE Truth about Queen and Meghan Markle, exposed by my extensive research. RICHARD EDEN'S sources raised upsetting questions about her and Harry's behaviour. Now he lays bare most disturbing comment of all
EXCLUSIVE Truth about Queen and Meghan Markle, exposed by my extensive research. RICHARD EDEN'S sources raised upsetting questions about her and Harry's behaviour. Now he lays bare most disturbing comment of all

Daily Mail​

time42 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

EXCLUSIVE Truth about Queen and Meghan Markle, exposed by my extensive research. RICHARD EDEN'S sources raised upsetting questions about her and Harry's behaviour. Now he lays bare most disturbing comment of all

When I wrote a Daily Mail column last November about what the late Queen Elizabeth , I was deluged with abuse from the 'Sussex squad', the collective noun proudly used by the Duke and 's most devoted supporters. They accused me of slandering the American former actress who, they claimed, had enjoyed a warm relationship with the grandmother of her husband, Prince Harry.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store