Di Hard
An inquest into Diana's death breathes life into the conspiracy theories
The Inquests
What Royal coroner Michael Burgess is looking for
Fayed
Is his a search for truth or vengeance?

What do you believe was the cause of Princess Diana's death?

A conspiracy to have her killed
A car accident


Coroner: Diana was not pregnant
Diana 'plot': Paper names Charles
British inquests into deaths of Diana, Dodi open
Police to probe Diana death claims

Farewell Diana [Sept. 15, 1997]
Royalty and the Press [Feb. 28, 1983]
The Prince's Charmer [Apr. 20, 1981]

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BRUNO VINCENT/GETTY IMAGES
SHRINE: The memorial to Dodi and Diana at Harrods

Haunting Diana
A British coroner asks police to investigate the death of the Princess of Wales, reviving all those wild conspiracy theories. Will they ever let her rest in peace? Never, says royals reporter STEPHEN BATES, even as he debunks the myths
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Posted Sunday, January 11, 2004; 15.48GMT

For a man attending the inquests into the death of his beloved son and his son's girlfriend, Mohammed al Fayed was anything but mournful. Accompanied by a phalanx of lawyers and p.r. flacks, the Egyptian-born billionaire emerged last Tuesday morning from an inquest session in London with an unmistakable air of triumph. And no wonder: the coroner, Michael Burgess, had just announced that he had asked Scotland Yard to help investigate the August 1997 deaths of Dodi Fayed and Diana, Princess of Wales. After identical proceedings in Reigate, 30 km south of London, al Fayed Senior — who owns the iconic London store Harrods and Fulham Football Club but has long felt shut out by the British establishment — gave the media pack his personal, oft-repeated verdict. "I suspect not only Prince Charles but Prince Philip, who is a racist," he announced. "It is absolutely black-and-white, horrendous murder." With that, the tycoon eased into a dark red Mercedes, looking altogether self-satisfied.

Nearly six-and-a-half years after that fatal car crash in a Paris tunnel, al Fayed finally had an entire nation (and a sizable chunk of the world) paying attention to his claim that Diana and Dodi had been murdered by British agents. Until now, it was mostly Diana worshipers and some paranoid Arab commentators who bought the conspiracy story; after all, al Fayed had provided not a jot of proof for his claim. But by calling in the police, Burgess had — wittingly or not — fired the imaginations of people around the world who suspect royal skulduggery. ("They have to investigate," says Sayed Ragab, a Cairo bookstore worker, "because there was surely foul play.") And if more fuel were needed, the U.K.'s Daily Mirror had supplied it that very morning: the tabloid revealed that in a letter written to her butler, Paul Burrell, 10 months before her death, Diana expressed the fear that she might be murdered in a car crash arranged by her ex-husband Charles, heir to the British throne.

And al Fayed's claim got another boost at week's end: the London Times reported that French investigators into the crash failed to conduct dna tests to confirm that a crucial blood sample, showing Diana's driver Henri Paul was drunk at the time of the crash, did indeed belong to Paul. The billionaire would no doubt take special pleasure in other reports that Charles and British intelligence agencies will face police questioning.

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QUICK LINKS: Haunting Diana | Truth or Vengeance | Burgess' Mission | Back to TIMEeurope.com Home
FROM THE JANUARY 19, 2004 ISSUE OF TIME MAGAZINE; POSTED SUNDAY, JANUARY 11, 2004.

BANNER PHOTO BY DAVID CHESKIN/PA

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