A senior aide to Prince Andrew privately admitted to an alleged Chinese spy that the duke’s BBC Newsnight interview had been “ill advised”, court documents show.
Files disclosed to the BBC and other media outlets reveal how the prince’s aide Dominic Hampshire thanked Yang Tengbo for standing by the embattled duke in the months after he had sought to explain on TV his friendship with sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
He told the Chinese businessman that the Newsnight appearance had been “unsuccessful”.
Last month a court rejected Mr Yang’s appeal against being banned from the UK, after an intelligence assessment that he could be secretly working for the Chinese state. Mr Yang has denied all wrongdoing.
The Special Immigration Appeals Commission (Siac) previously said that Mr Yang had won an “unusual degree of trust” from the royal.
Mr Yang came to study in UK in 2002 and later set up a series of China-related travel and business consultancy firms.
He took on a role in the China-based version of Prince Andrew’s “Pitch@Palace” events, in which entrepreneurs sell their ideas to investors.
Documents from the Siac case now show that friendship deepened in the wake of the November 2019 Newsnight interview, in which the Duke was questioned over his relationship with Epstein, and denied assaulting Virginia Giuffre.
Writing in March 2020, Prince Andrew’s senior aide Dominic Hampshire told Mr Yang how much his “principal” appreciated the fact that he had stood by him.
“We have dealt with the aftermath of a hugely ill-advised and unsuccessful television interview,” wrote Mr Hampshire on official Buckingham Palace notepaper.
“We have wisely navigated our way around former Private Secretaries and we have found a way to carefully remove those people who we don’t completely trust.
“Moreover, in what originally seemed like a lost cause, you have somehow managed to not only salvage but maintain and then incredibly, enhance the reputation of my principal in China.
“Under your guidance, we found a way to get the relevant people unnoticed in and out of the house of Windsor.
“We orchestrated a very powerful verbal message of support to China at a Chinese New Year’s dinner and between the three of us, we have written, amended and then always agreed a number of letters at the highest level possible.”
The disclosure on Friday comes after separate court documents revealed Prince Andrew appeared to have been in touch with Epstein for longer than he had previously admitted.
An email from a “member of the British Royal Family”, believed to be Prince Andrew, was sent to Epstein in February 2011, court documents showed.
In the Newsnight interview, the prince said he had not seen or spoken to Epstein since December 2010, when he visited the financier’s home in New York.
The email was revealed in a court case involving the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) and banker Jes Staley, who was banned from senior positions after he mischaracterised his relationship with Epstein.
Staley is appealing against the FCA, but the financial watchdog’s evidence about Staley’s contact with Epstein also contains emails relating to a “member of the British Royal Family”, showing what seem to be friendly and familiar exchanges.
In June 2010, Epstein emailed: “If you can find time to show jes around with vera that would be fun.. he told me he ran into you tonight,” in messages first reported by business news agency Bloomberg.
The Royal Family member responded by asking who Vera was, and a few days later Epstein replied: “my future ex wife, i know jes and she would love to see home”. A dinner then seems to have been arranged.
Court documents from the Siac case show Mr Hampshire said that since the Newsnight interview “numerous people” had shunned the prince because they had been “simply not true to their word or they are ‘red carpet chasers’.”
“I could list several high-profile and well-known names who are no longer around us and there are a very small number left – you remain as one of those and you continue to show total support and loyalty.”
He also sought to underline how close Mr Yang was close to the Duke because he had been invited to his 60th birthday dinner that year.
“This was strictly his and his family’s personal life that very, very few people have the privilege to ever be part of,” Mr Hampshire wrote.
“There is no doubt that despite everything going on around us, we have formed a solid and unbreakable base with all the respective parts in place for an extremely powerful (perhaps unparalleled) entity at the highest level possible.
“This stands us in great stead moving forward.
“I hope you agree that this would simply have not been possible without the depth of trust, friendship, loyalty and support that we have all built up with each other over these last few months.”
Police found the letter on Mr Yang’s phone when it was examined under counter-espionage powers.
A second letter from Mr Hampshire, sent in October 2020, confirmed to the businessman that he was authorised to represent Prince Andrew in China in relation to the Eurasia Fund, a financial initiative.
The aide stressed in the letter that any deals involving the Duke must comply with British law and best practices.
But other material found on the phone led then Home Secretary Suella Braverman to ban Mr Yang from the UK in 2023. The police and MI5 suspected Mr Yang might be part of a Chinese Communist Party “elite capture” operation to exert influence on the prince.
Security experts say “elite capture” is a well-documented tactic used by the Chinese state to expert influence on people at the top of British life such as politicians, academics and business leaders.
Mr Yang continues to deny wrongdoing and is seeking to appeal his UK ban.
In a statement issued as the documents were released on Friday, he said: “I reiterate that the allegations against me are entirely unfounded.
“I am unable to know all the allegations and evidence against me. I have followed that process in good faith and provided full disclosure of all my business and personal affairs.”
Mr Yang said that the UK’s position on China was “inconsistent and erratic” and he had been the victim of a “media circus”.
Source: www.bbc.com