Princess Lalla Hasna of Morocco | |
Full Name: | Lalla Hasna |
Royal House: | Alaouite |
House-Type: | Dynasty |
Father: | Hassan II |
Mother: | Lalla Latifa |
Birth Date: | 19 November 1967 |
Birth Place: | Rabat, Morocco |
Issue: | Lalla Oumaima Benharbit Lalla Oulaya Benharbit |
Princess Lalla Hasna of Morocco (Arabic: الأميرة لالة حسناء, born 19 November 1967) is the youngest daughter of King Hassan II and his wife, Princess Lalla Latifa. She is sister to the current king, Mohammed VI.
Lalla Hasna was born in the Royal Palace of Rabat. She was educated in this very city, at the Royal College where she obtained her High school diploma.[1]
Since her childhood, Princess Hasna has been interested in social and cultural activities, with special emphasis to environmental issues in Morocco. In 1999 she launched the national campaign for the protection of the environment and gave the prize for the most beautiful and cleanest beach in Morocco.
To shore up her work, the Mohammed VI Foundation for the protection of the environment was created in 2001 and chaired by Princess Hasna. She presides over the governing board of the foundation and regularly pays on the terrain visits to sensitize the population about environmental issues.
In 2002, Princess Lalla Hasna set up the prize of young reporters for the environment and in 2003 a prize for photography annually awarded on the international environment day.
She is Honorary President of the Hassanate Association for Human Development.[2]
Princess Lalla Hasna and Dr. Khalil Benharbit (born 1959), MD, a cardiologist, got married in Fez on September 8 and 9, 1994.[3] [4] They have two daughters:[5]
Lalla Hasna is the owner of a shell corporation that bought her an 11 million US dollar house near Kensington Palace in central London. According to the Pandora Papers, Hasnaa used the capital of the Moroccan royal family when buying the property. In the papers for the deal she stated that her profession is “princess”. Questions that were sent to the palace after Le Desk became known have so far remained unanswered.[6] [7]
Dame Grand Cross of the Royal Order of Isabella the Catholic (22 September 1989)[8]
Grand Cross of the Order of Leopold II (5 October 2004)
Grand Cross of the Order of the Aztec Eagle (11 February 2005)