Prince Harry said his status as a member of Britain's royal family does not negate his right to privacy while testifying in court.

The Duke of Sussex is the lead litigant in a case full of high-profile plaintiffs who accuse the publisher of the Daily Mail of invading their privacy.

The prince is one of seven high-profile claimants that allege the publisher of the Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday committed "grave breaches of privacy".

Prince Harry, Elton John and five others allege that the Daily Mail publisher illegally obtained information to produce stories, breaching privacy.

Earlier this week the court heard details of Harry’s ‘distress’ and ‘paranoia’ after several articles published in the Mail newspapers

Lawyers for Prince Harry previously laid out 14 articles about him they allege were secured using unlawful information-gathering by Associated Newspapers

Duke of Sussex rejects that his private information was secured from friends and says publisher has ‘obsession’ with surveilling him

The prince was emotional as he ended his evidence in the trial over alleged unlawful information gathering.

Prince Harry, on the stand in his trial against the Daily Mail's publisher, said the British tabloid made wife Duchess Meghan's life \

The Duke of Sussex's manner showed how personal this was to him, delivering terse and sometimes tense answers.

Tetchy responses from Duke of Sussex suggest his relationship with the press has caused a deep, raw wound

Prince Harry said his status as a member of Britain's royal family does not negate his right to privacy while testifying in court.

The actor is the latest to testify in court over a claim that the newspaper misused their private information