Prince William chokes up as he discusses impact of suicide
Europe
By
AFP
| Oct 10, 2025
Britain's Prince William fought back tears as he discussed the impact of suicide with a woman whose husband took his own life, in a video released Friday to mark World Mental Health Day.
The heir to the throne talked with campaigner Rhian Mannings, whose husband Paul died in 2012, five days after their one-year-old son George died following a seizure.
William, 43, became visibly emotional after asking Mannings what she would have said to her husband, as the two sat talking in her kitchen in Cardiff, Wales.
"I would just like to sit him down like this and just say, 'Why didn't you come to me?" said the mother of two teenagers.
"Because he's missed out on just so much joy, and we would have been okay. And I think that's what the hardest thing is, we would have been okay."
READ MORE
Families feel the pinch as war-hit diaspora remittances shrink
Mbadi names Adan Mohamed as new KRA chief
Kenya to host green hydrogen symposium as country positions for the global stage
Kingdom Bank deepens MSME push with Industrial Area branch
Court declines to lift orders blocking Safaricom sale as Vodafone loses bid to exit case
Kenya blockchain industry urges faster stablecoin adoption amid new digital asset rules
Activist files petition to block fuel price hike, seeks conservatory orders
Government launches construction of 114 solar mini grids in 14 counties
Kenya's cybersecurity skills gap persists despite training efforts
Ruto's budget limbo deepens as IMF digs in on bailout conditions
William, whose mother Princess Diana died in a car accident in Paris in 1997 when he was 15 years old, looked up and put his hand over his mouth.
"Are you okay?" Mannings asked him.
William reached out to touch her hand and told her: "I'm sorry. I just, it's hard to ask you the questions."
Mannings, who set up the charity 2wish to support families affected by the sudden death of a child, told him: "No it's fine. It's just you've got children. It's hard and you've experienced loss yourself."
William first met Mannings in 2017 as part of a mental health campaign that he started with his wife Catherine and now-estranged younger brother Prince Harry.
Friday's footage, released by Kensington Palace, coincided with the launch of a new national suicide prevention network, spearheaded by William and Catherine's philanthropic foundation.
"The best way to prevent suicide is to talk about it. Talk about it early. Talk about it with your loved ones, those you trust, your friends. So thank you for talking about it," William said to Mannings.