Inquest into death of Diana, Dodi nears completion


The coroner is to begin his summation today.

LONDON (AP) — Flashing lights, swarming paparazzi, a mysterious second car at the crash site, and a multi-tentacled conspiracy allegedly directed by the husband of Queen Elizabeth II — jurors have much to sort through in reaching a judgment on the deaths of Diana, Princess of Wales, and her lover Dodi Fayed.

Nearly 11 years after the tragedy that shook the world, testimony has ranged far and wide in an extraordinary coroner’s inquest, without shedding much light on claims that they were victims of a plot. The coroner, Lord Justice Scott Baker, is expected to begin his summation today, which may take days before going to the jury.

The key question for the jurors is whether the car crash in a Paris road tunnel Aug. 31, 1997, was an accident.

Mohamed Al Fayed has not budged from claiming that his son and the princess died at the hands of British security agents, acting at Prince Philip’s behest.

French police concluded it was an accident, caused in part by speeding and by the high alcohol level in driver Henri Paul’s blood. A British police investigation concurred.

More than 240 witnesses have testified since the inquest began on Oct. 2, including Diana’s close friends and former butler, Philip’s private secretary and a former head of the Secret Intelligence Service, MI6. Al Fayed’s late bid to force the coroner to summon Philip to testify, and for written questions to be put to the queen, was summarily rejected by a higher court.

There has been evidence that Diana feared dying in a car crash, but that she also had speculated about death in a helicopter or airplane crash; there was testimony that she feared Philip.

The basic scene is familiar: the couple’s car slammed into a concrete pillar in the Alma tunnel, after apparently having a glancing collision with a white Fiat Uno, as they were pursued from the Ritz Hotel by photographers. Some witnesses said they saw flashes of light in the instant before the crash; other witnesses didn’t see any. Al Fayed’s claim is that flashing lights disoriented the driver and sent the couple’s car into a fatal skid.

But there was precious little evidence to back up his claims that his son and Diana were engaged, that she was pregnant and that Philip was at the head of a murder plot.

Al Fayed believes the Establishment simply didn’t want Diana to marry his son, a Muslim.

As the inquest unfolded, some distance opened between Al Fayed and his lawyers.

Michael Mansfield, his main advocate, steered away from accusing Philip or claiming MI6 assassinated the couple. He did suggest that rogue agents might have been involved.

Mansfield has suggested that Diana’s campaign against land mines was the motive for the conspiracy — that she was assembling a dossier “capable of exposing historically British involvement in Angola because of who manufactured the weaponry, how it was got in there.”

Al Fayed was the only witness to claim Diana was engaged to his son. He was told of the engagement, Al Fayed said, in a telephone call hours before the crash.