Princess Diana’s former butler, Paul Burrell, demands an apology from him prince harry, after the Duke of Sussex testified on Tuesday that he had once accused him of selling his mother’s possessions, calling him a “two-faced s@@@@”.

Burrell, who worked for Diana for more than a decade before her death in 1997, called on Harry, 38, to retract the “defamatory” statements he made at London’s High Court on Tuesday as part of the legal of the standoff with the Mirror Group over wiretapping.

While in the dock, the Duke of Sussex admitted calling Burrell a “two-faced … seeking his own attention and self-interest” in a 2003 voicemail to his brother Prince William, which was leaked to The People magazine .

In a sworn statement to the court, Harry said he and William, 40, “had very ‘strong feelings’ about how indiscreet Paul had been in selling our mother’s belongings and giving lots of interviews about her.” .

In response, Burrell demanded that Harry “stop” his claims. “I want him to apologize because it’s not true. He knows very well that I always protected and loved his mother, him and William when they were younger,” Burrell gushed. “I don’t know how he says that, because it’s not true, it’s just not.”

“I think he thinks this is a PR exercise and he doesn’t care about the victims in his fight against the media,” he continued. “He complained in Spare’s book that he sacrificed himself on the altar of Camilla’s PR, and he’s doing the same thing,” he added.

“I’m not a two-faced f@@@.” Don’t say that. I was accused of something I didn’t do,” Burrell argued.

In the courtroom on Tuesday, Harry referred to a 2003 report in The People that he used the particular “cosmetic epithet” during an argument he had with William over a possible meeting with Burrell.

“I left voicemails for my brother… and that’s a term I used to describe Mr Burrell, yes,” Harry admitted when pressed by Andrew Green, the lawyer representing the Mirror.

The prince accuses the Mirror group of newspapers of wiretapping him, and other unethical practices, to obtain information about him throughout his life.

Prince Harry’s testimony in court concluded on Wednesday.