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Meghan Markle has gushed about her daughter, three, in a speech about 'Afro women and power' talk on the final day of her tour in Colombia with Prince Harry.
She said that Lilibet 'has found her voice and we are so proud of that' in the speech the Duchess also used to pay tribute to her mother.
Meghan said: 'For me I find inspiration in so many of the strong women around me. My mother being one of them. Life is full of surprises and can be quite complex.
'So much of how I approach things is about less of the fight and how do we wash things over with love and kindness and generosity.
'You see something wrong and you go and fix it. As women we are multi-taskers and fixers. We all know how much representation matters.'
The Duchess also said that as her mother, she is encouraging Lilibet to not 'sit in silence'.
'At three she has found her voice and we are so proud of that, because that is how we create the conditions in which there is a ripple effect of young girls and young women knowing that if someone else is encouraging them to use their voice and be heard, that's what they are going to do,' she added.
Meghan speaks as part of the panel at the Afro women and power forum in Cali
Meghan Markle said that Lilibet (pictured in 2022) 'has found her voice and we are so proud of that' in the speech the Duchess also used to pay tribute to her mother.
Meghan (second left) speaks as part of the panel at the Afro women and power forum in Cali
Meghan Markle on stage for the Afro women and power debate in Cali
Meghan and Harry laugh as they sit in the audience at the Afro Women and Power event
Meghan and Harry lift their hands up as they attend the Afro Women and Power event
Meghan opened her intervention at the debate speaking in Spanish and calling Ms Marquesa 'my friend' before going on to pay tribute to Harry as she carried on in English.
To a huge cheer she said:' I would like to begin in Spanish because we are in your country, my husband and I, and I can feel this embrace from Colombia.
'It's incredible, so many, many thanks, because the culture, the history, everything has been like a dream on this trip.
'Sorry if my Spanish is not perfect because I learned it 20 years ago in Argentina, but I'm trying here because I can feel this community and this feeling which is the best in the world.'
She added: 'So thank you very much to the vice president, my friend, many thanks.'
A Colombian journalist said:' For Meghan to say my friend in that way is such a powerful statement and shows just how close they have become. People will take note of that.'
Meghan then continued in English to retell her childhood story about writing to Procter & Gamble. 'I was very, very fortunate at a young age to feel as though my voice was being heard,' she said.
'And I think that is a luxury that a lot of young girls and women aren't often afforded.
Meghan, Duchess of Sussex and Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex seen at the Afro-Descendant Women and Power: Voice of Equity at the Teatro Municipal on August 18, 2024 in Cali, Colombia
Meghan speaks at the Afro women and power event in Cali on Sunday
Yerney Pinillo, Colombia Vice President Francia Marquez, Meghan, Duchess of Sussex and Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex attend the Afro-Descendant Women and Power: Voice of Equity at the Teatro Municipal on August 18, 2024 in Cali, Colombia
Harry and Meghan greet people on arrival to the Afro women and power debate
Meghan appeared on Nick News after lobbying the manufacturing company to change a TV ad for dishwashing liquid in 1993
'I was 11-years-old, and you may know this story, I had seen a commercial that I felt was sexist, and I wrote a letter, several letters, about it, and the commercial was changed when you're 11-years-old, and you realise very quickly that your small voice can have a very large impact.
'I think it creates the framework to feel empowered to use your voice, because you know you're being listened to.'
The Duchess often uses the childhood story in her speeches and interviews, despite some questions being raised about its validity in recent years.
The account was stripped out of a Vanity Fair cover story in 2017 after 'fact checkers raised questions about its accuracy,' a biography said.
The anecdote was cut from the cover story 'after consulting P&G and advertising historians,' according to Tom Bower's book Revenge: Meghan, Harry and the War Between the Windsors.