Duke of Sussex previously said he feared for his family’s safety visiting UK due to intense media scrutiny
Prince Harry and Meghan Markle’s latest trip abroad has raised eyebrows among royal experts about their alleged safety concerns.
The Duke and Duchess of Sussex spent the past four days in Colombia at the invitation of Vice President Francia Márquez.
They arrived Thursday in Bogota where they met with Márquez and visited a charter school before taking part in an Insight Session about social media, according to People.
Prince Harry and Markle also met with the country’s Invictus Games athletes on Saturday. That same day, they joined in on a drum lesson and took in other cultural traditions and tours. Similar events continued through Sunday.
The couple also took part in several discussions and panels on digital safety, a primary focus of the couple’s work through their Archewell foundation.
During one such panel on Aug. 16, Markle told the audience, “We should model how we want our kids to be raised and for the world in which we raise them. It doesn’t matter where you live. It doesn’t matter who you are. Either you personally or someone you know is a victim to what’s happening online. And that’s something we can actively work on every day to remedy,” per People.
The concerns over safety both online and during travel have some experts questioning Harry and Meghan’s thought process.
“This entire tour is the height of Harry‘s hypocrisy,” Hilary Fordwich, royal expert, tells Fox News Digital. “Yet another stop on their ‘worldwide privacy tour.'”