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Meghan spends two hours at 'Megstock' festival posing for photos with fans.


 Meghan spends two hours at 'Megstock' festival posing for photos with fans who had paid £1,700 and telling them about her 'very hard life'.

Meghan Markle spent just two hours with female fans who paid up to £1,700 to ask her questions and pose for pictures at a money-spinning 'ultimate girls' weekend' in Sydney where she bemoaned her 'very hard' life.

The Duchess of Sussex will reportedly net up to £130,000 for turning up to the women-only Her Best Life retreat on the final day of her Australian tour with Prince Harry. 

After 120 minutes at the gala dubbed 'Megstock' due to its guest of honour, Meghan departed the InterContinental Coogee with her husband shortly after 7pm, in the back of a luxury Range Rover. 

Excited paying guests had started turning up at the five-star beachside hotel in Sydney's eastern suburbs from 3pm due to the strict security arrangements, with the official event kicking off at 5pm.  

On stage at the gala dinner, where paying guests ate kingfish, beef tenderloin and coconut crumble, Meghan bemoaned her 'very hard' life in the public eye, claiming she has been 'attacked' ever since marrying Prince Harry.

The duchess said she had enjoyed 'amazing moments' since meeting the British royal, including getting married and having two children, but insisted she had also 'endured' constant attacks for a decade.

Before she began speaking, Prince Harry, who was one of the few men in the audience, reportedly gave his wife a standing ovation as she arrived in the room.

He apparently gave her a kiss and then helped her on to a stage that looked remarkably like an Oprah-style US TV set. Harry then sat and watched in the front row.

Meghan, who enjoyed vocal support from the audience, said Archie and Lilibet are her 'inspiration' and said criticisms of her were based on 'projections.'

Meghan admitted that becoming a parent had taught her patience, adding this skill was something important 'given what our life is like.'

The Sydney Daily Telegraph managed to get a reporter inside and wrote a piece entitled: 'Meghan Markle bemoans public life at exclusive Sydney retreat with $2600 tickets.'

People at the event, who had already been asked to have a bag search and body scan to enter, were told there was a 'no recording policy for the duration of her interview', calling it a 'non-negotiable security requirement'.

But attendees had also paid an extra $500 for the 'VIP experience', which included a picture with Meghan at the event organised by broadcaster Jackie ‘O’ Henderson and Gemma O’Neill’s Besties company.

Participants at the women's retreat were left to enjoy an evening without the duchess, and will spend the weekend relaxing at the hotel where they can lounge by the pool, do yoga, meditate, try 'sound healing' and listen to inspirational guest speakers.

After leaving the gala on Friday evening, the Sussexes made their way to a match between the NSW Waratahs and Moana Pasifika.

They sat in the VIP section and Meghan smiled as she placed her hand on Harry's knee at the Allianz Stadium as her rugby-mad husband took in the game.

Meghan's lucrative meet-and-greet came on a day where the Duke and Duchess of Sussex spoke to and hugged survivors of the Bondi terrorist attack in December.

They then sailed around Sydney Harbour at an event to promote Invictus Australia next to the Opera House. 

The tour, which ended on Friday, mixed lucrative events and charity visits.

A source close to the Sussexes insisted that the Australian adventure has been a success - and that the 'half in, half out model' opposed by the late Queen and the Royal Family can work.

'We’ve tested the playbook, it worked,' a source close to the Sussexes told The Daily Telegraph in Sydney as the couple head back to LA.

'They’re doing the right thing. Whether you want to call it half in, half out or – as they would probably describe it – just doing what they want to do and doing it in a really positive way, this week has given us reassurance that it is the right course of action. This could absolutely act as a blueprint for the future.”

A member of Harry's close circle added that he is 'philosophical' about some of the criticism he and Meghan have received Down Under.

'One thing that Harry often says is that the truth will always out', they said.

'The more they do of this, the more that people see them, interact with them, the more they see that there isn’t an agenda here'.

As the couple departed the InterContinental Coogee, a young Aussie man rushed at their car armed with a longneck beer bottle and a workman's boot, asking Harry to 'do a shoey' - an Australian tradition where booze is necked from a shoe.


Tags: Queen, Prince Charles, Camilla, Prince Louis, Prince William and Kate Middleton, Prince Charles, Prince Harry, Meghan, Lilibet


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