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Inquest into Princess Diana's death to reopen

The investigation on the deaths of Britain's Princess Diana and her lover Dodi Al Fayed in a 1997 comes in for more scrutiny on Monday when an inquest reopens after a three-year break.

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LONDON:  The investigation on the deaths of Britain's Princess Diana and her lover Dodi Al Fayed in a 1997 comes in for more scrutiny on Monday when an inquest reopens after a three-year break.   

Three weeks ago, a lengthy police investigation ruled that the crash was an accident and the two were not the victims of an elaborate murder plot. A two-year French investigation had already come to the same conclusion.   

Diana, who was 36, Fayed and their chauffeur Henri Paul died when their Mercedes limousine smashed at high speed into a pillar inside a Paris road tunnel. They were speeding away from the Ritz Hotel, after being pursued by paparazzi on motorbikes.   

In the decade since the accident, a host of conspiracy theories flourished, suggesting the couple were murdered because their relationship was embarrassing the British royal family.    The death of the People's Princess divorced from the then-heir-to-the-throne Prince Charles sparked an outpouring of grief in Britain.   

A two-year French investigation ruled out foul play, saying Paul was responsible because he was under the influence of anti-depressants, drunk and driving too fast. That has not stopped sceptics to point the finger at British spies acting on the orders of Queen Elizabeth's husband Prince Phillip or even of Prince Charles.   

When the formal British inquest opened in 2004, it was immediately adjourned in a dramatic fashion by the then royal coroner Michael Burgess to allow police to carry out a top-level investigation into the allegations.   

That three-year inquiry, headed by former London police chief John Stevens, dismissed claims that Diana was pregnant and was engaged, or about to get engaged, to Fayed. "On the evidence available now, there was no conspiracy to murder any of the occupants of that car. It was a tragic accident," Stevens said.       

However, under British law, an inquest is needed to determine the cause of death when someone dies unnaturally. It cannot apportion blame but can rule that the death was "unnatural" due to violence or an accident.   

The police report will be at the centre of the inquest, which resumes on Monday, but Stevens said his findings should not prejudge its conclusions. The inquest has already attracted controversy after Elizabeth Butler-Sloss, who took over last year as the presiding judge, decided initial hearings should be conducted in secret.

She changed her mind after strong criticism from Fayed's father Mohamed, owner of the London store Harrods and the leading advocate of murder conspiracy theories. Preliminary hearings will decide whether inquests into Diana and Fayed's deaths should be held together, whether a jury should be present and if so, who will take part.   

Nothing short of a full public inquiry is likely to satisfy Fayed. "I will never accept this cover-up of what really happened," he said after the Stevens report, which he called 'garbage'. "For nine years I have fought against overwhelming odds and monstrous official obstructions. I will not stop now in my quest for the truth."

 

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