In a tale so grotesque it could only have been penned by a drunken Norse saga ghostwriter, Norway’s very own royal oaf, the son of Crown Princess Mette-Marit, has been slung into the clink ahead of a rape verdict. Yes, Marius Borg Høiby, the 27-year-old princeling who has spent his life making headlines for everything but sensible governance, now faces the cold embrace of a prison cell while the UK’s extradition treaty looms like a soggy, bureaucratic Valkyrie.
One might say the lad has taken the concept of ‘Norwegian wood’ a touch too far, and not in the agreeable, IKEA-flatpack sense. Prosecutors, in a rare display of Scandinavian steel, have seen fit to remand him in custody, arguing that he’s a flight risk with a passport and a likely destination in a country that treats royal misbehaviour with a polite ‘tsk tsk’ rather than a cell door slamming. But the UK treaty adds a piquant twist: if he’s found guilty and skips town, Her Majesty’s government (not his mummy’s) can drag him back by the scruff of his Jaeger scarf.
The details, as they dribble out of the courtroom, suggest a case involving a woman who had the audacity to say ‘no’ to a member of the bloodline. The defence, presumably, will lean on the tired old ‘he’s a troubled soul’ narrative, trotted out anytime a trust-fund baby does something unspeakable. But let’s be honest, if this were a commoner from the fjords, he’d be halfway to a salt mine by now.
Meanwhile, the Norwegian press is having a field day, their moral outrage barely concealed behind headlines that scream ‘Scandal!’ while their sub-editors quietly polish their royal biographies. The palace, of course, has issued a statement so anodyne it could cure insomnia: ‘We respect the judicial process and hope for a fair outcome.’ Translation: ‘Please don’t mention the hereditary alcoholism.’
And what of the UK extradition treaty? Ah, the Treaty of 1873, a relic of a time when Britain could bully any Nordic nation into extraditing a wayward earl. Now dusted off to handle a rape case that involves a woman who, one suspects, never expected to be caught in the crosshairs of diplomatic cables. It’s a farce, a bloody farce, played out in Oslo’s marble halls while the tabloids on Fleet Street salivate over the prospect of a royal perp walk.
But pause, dear reader, and consider the grim realities. This is not a Swedish crime drama with a neat resolution. This is a woman’s life shredded by a man who thinks his surname is a get-out-of-jail card. The remand is a small mercy, a sign that the law may yet treat him as just another human, not a demigod with a drinking problem. Yet the shadow of the extradition treaty reminds us that justice is a currency, traded between nations, and often devalued by privilege.
So raise a glass of aquavit (or gin, in my case) to the Norwegian justice system, which has momentarily triumphed over monarchy. But keep your eye on the courtroom door, because if this princeling skips to London, we’ll have a diplomatic tiff that will make Brexit look like a polite disagreement over pickled herring. The verdict? It’s coming, and with it, a lesson in how the powerful fall, or how they don’t. Until then, the prison walls in Oslo are a little more crowded, and Norway’s crown a little less shiny.









