The Sunday Post (Inverness)

Necks big thing? Cash raised to bring giraffes to zoo

- By Craig Mcdonald cmcdonald@sundaypost.com

LAnimal lovers have donated more than £25,000 to help bring giraffes back to Edinburgh Zoo for the first time in 15 years. The attraction has not hosted giraffes in recent years due to a lack of an enclosure that is the right size to care for

orraine Kelly defended Prince Harry and Meghan against their critics yesterday and suggested the royals should consider moving to Africa to avoid the flak.

The broadcaste­r described some of the criticism of the Duke and Duchess of Sussex as “shocking”.

The couple have complained about some media repor t - ing since their marriage and, sources suggest, have considered moving to Cape Town to avoid the attention.

Prince Harr y spoke on a recent tour of Africa of his love of Africa and how it “held him in an embrace” when he first visited shortly after the death of his mum Pr incess Diana.

Kelly said, following criticism of Me g h a n in p a r t i c u l a r, the couple should g i ve thought to moving there permanentl­y.

She said: “The amount of abuse that she’s had is absolutely shocking. “A couple of times they have brought it on themselves, to be fair. It’s that kind of ‘do as I say, not as I do’ thing that you have to be careful about.

“But they really do have the best intentions. It makes me think, ‘ Maybe just duck out?’ Maybe it’s best they take a step back and go and live in Africa.” Speaking to The Times as her new book, Shine, a blend of autobiogra­phy and self- help, is launched, Kelly believes trolling has also affected politics.

She declines to say where she them, but the Royal Zoological Society of Scotland has begun work to create a £2.8 million giraffe house and unique landscape for the animals on a hillside at the attraction. A crowdfundi­ng campaign, which was launched in the summer stands on Scottish independen­ce or Brexit, adding, “I just can’t. It’s not worth it”.

But she said of the current confusion which reigns in Westminste­r: “It’s toxic. Where are the leaders, the great orators? “Where are the people that went into politics to make a change? I’m talking about people who just have a genuine desire to make life better.” Speaking about how

she asking the public to help raise £100,000 towards the scheme, has now raised over a quarter of that total. The population of giraffes is declining in the wild, and there are now thought to be fewer than 100,000 left.

The zoo say that by appeared less than impressed when asked on screen if she remembered for mer fellow b re a k f a s t p re s e n t e r Esther Mcvey, now a Tory MP, Kelly said she’d been annoyed by Mcvey’s stance on gay rights.

Kelly said: “I don’t even remember her at GMTV. She was on the show before me just filling in for Fiona Phillips.

“But that day she was spouting nonsense. She’d been in the restoring giraffes to their collection, they will be able to educate the public about the animals’ plight and fund vital conservati­on work. Edinburgh will house a herd of Rothschild’s giraffe of which there are believed to be only 1600 left in the wild. papers talking about LGBT rights and I just thought, ‘ No. This is not right’.”

The journalist and host who grew up in a one- room flat in Glasgow’s Gorbals won a place at university to read English and Russian but turned it down for a local newspaper reporting job. By 30, she was hosting ITV’S Good Morning Britain despite one executive once telling her she’d never have a screen career as, “no one on television speaks like you”.

Despite now being viewed as a national institutio­n after 35 years on breakfast TV, Kelly, 59, admitted there have been many occasions where “we all have to put our game face on” as she faced challenges off-screen. She said: “There’ve been times when I’ve gone into work, especially this year when my dad was ill, or after I had a miscarriag­e or went through the menopause, when I lost myself. “I’m not wanting anybody to feel sorry for me, but those times I was thinking, ‘I’m overwhelme­d here.’

“But we’re all like that – you put your smiley face on, and do the job you’re paid to do. Nobody wants you sitting there moaning.”

 ??  ?? A giraffe in Amboseli National Park in Kenya, East Africa. Animal lovers are raising money to bring the mammals back to Edinburgh Zoo TV presenter Lorraine Kelly
A giraffe in Amboseli National Park in Kenya, East Africa. Animal lovers are raising money to bring the mammals back to Edinburgh Zoo TV presenter Lorraine Kelly
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