Princes agree with Diana inquest verdict

Princess Diana’s two sons, William and Harry, have said they agree with the jury’s verdicts at the inquest into their mother’…

Princess Diana’s two sons, William and Harry, have said they agree with the jury’s verdicts at the inquest into their mother’s death.

Yesterday the inquest ruled Diana and her lover Dodi al-Fayed were unlawfully killed by the grossly negligent driving of their chauffeur and paparazzi photographers pursuing them into a Paris road tunnel 10 years ago.

Princess Diana pictured in 1997
Princess Diana pictured in 1997

The jury, which had spent almost six months listening to more than 250 witnesses from around the world, reached their decision on Monday after deliberating for four days in a case that had sparked worldwide media interest.

Princes William and Harry thanked the jury for the "thorough way in which they have considered the evidence".

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"We agree with their verdicts," a statement said.

A decade after the death of the world's most photographed woman at 36, Britain's former police chief John Stevens said he hoped this would bring closure to the tragedy and lay to rest conspiracy theories swirling around the case.

On the evening they died, Diana and Dodi fled from the back entrance of the Ritz Hotel in Paris in a futile effort to avoid swarms of paparazzi photographers.

They pursued the couple on high-powered motorbikes into the Alma tunnel and took pictures of the dying princess in the wrecked Mercedes after it smashed into pillar 13.

Dodi's father, luxury store owner Mohamed al-Fayed, had accused Queen Elizabeth's husband Prince Philip, Diana's former father-in-law, of ordering British security services to kill her and stop her marrying a Muslim and having his baby.

In a statement after the judgment, al-Fayed said: "I'm not the only person who said they were murdered. Diana predicted that she would be murdered and how it would happen. So I am disappointed."

He insisted the Queen and her husband should have been called as witnesses. "No one should be above the law."

"I have always believed that Prince Philip and the Queen hold valuable evidence that only they know."

Henri Paul, the chauffeur, was an employee of the Ritz Hotel, owned by al-Fayed. Paul died in the crash.

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