Princess Beatrice who attended alongside her husband, Edoardo Mapelli Mozzi, told the outlet: “The most amazing thing about GOSH is that they deliver such wonderful medical care to these children. No matter what you are doing, taking the time to focus on children’s health is the most important thing.
She added: “After having my own children, you recognise that coming together to support children’s medical welfare is the most incredible thing you can do with your time.”
Eugenie also added that she was “honoured” to attend the event and support the charity.
Jeremy Clarkson who lives in the area where the event was hosted, added: “There is a nice quote I heard, which is: ‘Trying to determine why some people don’t get better gives them hope, and hope is half the battle.’ So if there is the money to look into why, the people who are suffering have hope, which is so important.”
Jeremy Clarkson was previously accused of spreading “hate rhetoric” after he published his comments about Meghan Markle in The Sun. 25,000 people complained to Ipso, the Independent Press Standards Organisation, after the article was published, according to the BBC.
The Sun and Jeremy Clarkson apologised for the column and removed the article from the website. While it said the column fell “short of its high editorial standards and should not have been published,” it did not accept that it breached the editor’s code, saying concerns raised were a “matter of taste and judgement”.
The watchdog rejected complaints that the piece was discriminatory on the grounds of race, inaccurate or sought to harass the Duchess.
In the column, Clarkson wrote that he was “dreaming of the day when [Meghan] is made to parade naked through the streets of every town in Britain while crowds chant, ‘Shame!’ and throw lumps of excrement at her”. He later explained that he had been thinking of a scene in Game of Thrones, but later apologised to Meghan Markle and Prince Harry.