Mystery of the Morocco's missing Princess:
Why Harry and Meghan will not meet King's
wife.
MEGHAN Markle and Harry have travelled to
Morocco and were set to meet the country�s
ruler King Mohammed VI, 55, today, however
they will not be meeting his wife Princess
Salma.
But what is the reason?
The 40-year-old mother-of-two has not been
seen in public since the end of 2017.
She was last seen visiting the Mohammed VI
Museum in Rabat but speculation about her
whereabouts has been growing ever since.
It is widely believed the royal couple have
secretly divorced.
The Moroccan media has chosen to ignore the
princess� disappearance from public life
and she is referred to as Morocco�s �missing�
princess.
Some believe she remained in Morocco but has
been deliberately kept hidden.
But others think she is living in exile in
the US or in the Greek island of Kea with
the couple�s youngest daughter, Princess
Lalla Khadija.
The palace has never released any official
details on the princess� whereabouts.
The princess, just like Meghan, is a advocate
of women�s rights.
She also attended Kate and Prince William�s
wedding in 2011.
Netty Leistra, a royal journalist, told Royal
Central: �I think Salma had a very hard
job trying to be the first visible wife of
a Moroccan king.
�There is quite an age gap too.
Salma did some good things and of course,
gave birth to two children.
�I always thought she did rather well.
�I guess that if the news is correct about
the divorce, they will give her a nice big
house and all the money she needs so that
she won�t say anything about it.
�But I think it is rather sad if it is true.�
Meghan and Harry met the King Mohammed VI
at the entrance to their royal villa in the
ground�s of the king�s palace on Saturday
night.
The couple�s trip has been focusing on women�s
empowerment, social entrepreneurship and girls�
education.
The Duchess of Sussex was given a henna tattoo
- a good luck gesture from her Moroccan hosts
- during a visit to a boarding house in the
Atlas mountains.
The boarding house is run by Education for
All, an organisation for girls aged between
12 and 18 in some of the poorest and remote
parts of the country.
They have also visited a market run by social
entrepreneurs and met young people.
