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00:07:22hit a murder and not an accident absolutely he's a terrorist murder okay not a murder is a slaughter
00:07:28or those bloody racist royal family you think prince philip is so smart that he can mastermind
00:07:35all this and orchestrate it yeah he's vicious i yeah of course you think a guy like that would
00:07:40accept my son different religion different nationality will be the future stepfather of
00:07:49the future king you think this bloody racist family right will accept that i feel for you if
00:07:56my daughters were in that car would lady die and this was uh you know of course you'd want to get
00:08:01to the bottom i'd want to get to the bottom of it and i don't blame you mr alfayette just as a
00:08:05background are you a self-made guy i mean did you just come to that's right that's self-made all i
00:08:09know is he owns harrods and that store is amazing i think the whole bloody thing's racist i think
00:08:15the mohammed from the day that he came here and had the temerity to bid for the top people's store
00:08:21has been considered to be some sort of wog nigger if you like who has sort of thrust himself on
00:08:29british society born in alexandria under british colonial rule mohammed quickly left behind his
00:08:35humble egyptian origins making a fortune as a middleman for british firms in the middle east
00:08:39and whilst doing so becoming a global billionaire proving that it's not where you come from that
00:08:46matters it's where you end up and he's ended up in a very nice place indeed besides having owned
00:08:53harrods for 25 years mohammed al-fayed owns the paris ritz a villa in saint-tropet a scottish castle
00:09:02and a tudor mansion on the edge of london but he chooses to spend much of his time
00:09:09in this tent so he can be close to the burial place of his son dodie
00:09:14he remembers the night of the tragedy all too clearly straight away gone to the mortuary
00:09:21to see dodie you know it was terrible scene you know it was so difficult
00:09:27and everything worked in my mind that's definitely that they killed him and this is the place which
00:09:37he basically lived most of the time he liked to play polo this is the whole field which i planted
00:09:44as a forest i come sometime here i have when i'm here i have breakfast i sit with him because we believe
00:09:50soul comes out you know maybe he's watch his soul watching us talking to us
00:09:55who knows what fate will produce
00:10:18who knows what circumstances will provoke
00:10:20the crash happened on the 31st of august 1997 the last day of an extraordinary month for diana
00:10:50there was the whirlwind romance with dodie fevered speculation in the press that she was about to
00:10:55get married even that she might be pregnant where would it all end would the mother of the future
00:11:01king of england get hitched to a muslim and have children by him too and set up a rival court in the
00:11:06usa the princess of the world at that time the girl everybody wanted i saw him with her i saw the house in
00:11:20malibu that thought he was gonna buy for them who knows what might have happened if she'd live
00:11:28so whether you think it was an accident or murder one fact is incontrovertibly true it was chillingly
00:11:34convenient for the windsors that diana died when she did the last holiday she spent with her boys with
00:11:42me for nearly two weeks she was worried and she told me exactly what's gonna happen to her so she
00:11:48definitely rocked the boat in a in an extraordinary fashion and she's still rocking it she won't go
00:11:53quietly that's the problem i'll fight till the end
00:11:56it's day one of the inquest into diane and dodie's deaths some say the cause was a drunken driver
00:12:09called on report some blame the paparazzi others suspect foul play a staged crash involving a
00:12:16mysterious white fiat uno perhaps on the orders of prince philip the french report into the crash has
00:12:21been kept secret the british report was riddled with contradictions several coroners came and went
00:12:27and attempts to hold the inquest without a jury were overturned so here we are at last at the start
00:12:33of an inquest that may finally turn the full floodlights onto the workings of the british
00:12:37establishment and the royal family the media call this the diana inquest forgetting that three people
00:12:44died in that crash not just diana but dodie fired and driver on report too apparently there is a
00:12:50meritocracy even in death and some demises are considered more important than others
00:12:55that's me keith allen outside the royal courts of justice note that name royal courts of justice
00:13:03a sure sign of impartiality in a case where the credibility of the royal family is on trial
00:13:08in the royal courts of justice with a judge or coroner as he's called here who has sworn an oath of
00:13:13allegiance to the queen and has queen's councillors on every side and has already said that he is
00:13:18reminded not to call senior royals as witnesses historically the relationship between the royal
00:13:25family courts has been difficult mainly because every judge has taken an oath of allegiance to the
00:13:31queen now if you've taken an oath of allegiance to the queen then you have a legal case involving the
00:13:39monarchy i mean you're going to be biased aren't you curiously the media have decided the outcome of
00:13:44the inquest before it has even begun and have already declared it a waste of time and money
00:13:49many media organizations including the bbc have even sent their royal reporters to cover it rather
00:13:56than their legal reporters our royal correspondent nicholas whichell is at the high court nick yet diana
00:14:01was no longer royal at the time of her death and bbc royal reporters are required to spend their lives
00:14:07shamelessly sucking up to the palace and presenting the windsors to the public in a favorable light so
00:14:12what chance is there of impartiality from them with most people getting their news about the inquest
00:14:18from journalists with such an obvious bias i thought it was important that somebody with an open mind also
00:14:23reported on it quiz custodiet ipsos custodais who judges the judges well on this occasion it seemed to be me
00:14:31and my mole from the outset it was clear that the coroner was firmly on the side of the establishment
00:14:38hardly surprising as he's part of it i thought the story of the opening day would be the coroner points
00:14:46the jury in the direction of it being an accident which he clearly did and also the fact he was
00:14:53anticipating what the former leader of the london police was going to say without him being there
00:14:57i anticipate that lord stephens will give evidence that he was trying to reassure the pauls
00:15:05that their son had not been as drunk as a pig as had been alleged in some newspapers seems to me that
00:15:14the establishment have been talking to each other and squaring their stories before the inquest gets
00:15:19underway why aren't the media suspicious this is really fishy there's something very odd going on around
00:15:26here and what makes it all the more odd is that the the juiciest bits the bits that are striking me
00:15:32as being the murkiest of all aren't being reported anywhere and it wasn't so much that there was a
00:15:39conspiracy amongst other journalists that there was an established consensus and anyone who sort of
00:15:47thought or spoke or wrote outside that consensus were regarded as being odd this has interesting echoes
00:15:54of the merchant of denis because if you go back to the merchant of denis i mean the fundamental point
00:15:59is about shylock is different he's jewish in this case but also oriental despite what i remember being
00:16:04told at school shakespeare's shylock wasn't actually a bad character at all he was just a foreigner who
00:16:10wanted justice but was swindled out of it by the venetian establishment here's fired the oriental going and
00:16:16saying by the way i want a fair trial and they're saying well no just a minute you know it's all over i mean
00:16:20don't bother about don't be serious it was an accident you know we didn't really mean it
00:16:24no he's i'm coming into court i'm coming i'm going to use your judicial system against you
00:16:28and of course he's robbed in court when you read that you can also read it as an essay in the way
00:16:33in which the establishment the venetian establishment suddenly find themselves confronted by an outsider
00:16:38who's demanding his rights he's saying all i want is justice can i have justice please
00:16:42you set up all this judicial system i'd like it please and they want to really say well it's not for
00:16:47you you bastard the point of the inquest is to investigate these suspicious circumstances
00:16:51surrounding the crash but will it answer these questions was it pure coincidence that diana told
00:16:58many people she would be deliberately killed in a car crash why did these cc tv cameras along the route
00:17:04apparently not record anything were driver omri paul's blood samples tampered with to make him appear
00:17:09wildly drunk even though he seemed to be sober why were diana's phone calls being bugged by the american
00:17:16secret services and who was driving the white fiat uno that may have caused the crash poor diana
00:17:23all the royals wanted was a brood mare crossed with a clothes horse
00:17:27have a little love on a little honeymoon you got a little dish and you got a little spoon a little
00:17:34bitty house and a little bitty yard a little bitty dog and a little bitty car but it's all right
00:17:40to be a little bitty in a little hometown or a big old city might as well share might as well smile
00:17:47life goes on for a little bitty while life did indeed go on for a little bitty while until the brood mare
00:17:54turned out to be a kicker who bolted through the stable door and went to get her oats elsewhere
00:17:59the establishment didn't want the idea of a future king of england having a muslim
00:18:06half-brother or sister there's only one conspiracy theory as far as i'm concerned to do the death of
00:18:13diana and that is a conspiracy that's grown up that it was an accident before a single witness
00:18:20had been called i think the remaining thing that needs to be done is the jury bailiffs need to be
00:18:27sworn for the journey to paris see you in paris this is where the jury will gather to retrace diana
00:18:36and dodie's final journey we'll have to be careful not to film the jury because we could be sent to
00:18:43prison for contempt if we show their faces even though anyone who bothers to come here can see
00:18:47perfectly well who they are and oh look oh there's pos spice who just happens to walk out of the
00:19:00ritz while the world's cameras are here diana was a celebrity who was supposedly hounded by the paparazzi
00:19:06yep now here's another celebrity using the inquest as a chance for a photo opportunity with the
00:19:11paparazzi they never learn ah there's the legal charabang this bus is officially a courtroom we've been
00:19:19told and must be treated with the same dignity as the royal courts of justice themselves but oh dear
00:19:25first it appears to have knocked a policeman off his motorcycle and now and our tire has just burst
00:19:30thereby somehow undermining the majesty of the law
00:19:33after the jury had visited the crash scene so did i
00:19:38this is it yeah is this the tunnel yeah you didn't know no as well as endlessly debating whether
00:19:47dodie might have impregnated diana the inquest devoted several weeks to a minute investigation
00:19:52of her periods contraceptives and sexual habits it's almost as though the establishment wanted to
00:19:59demythologize her in the eyes of ordinary people by putting her uterus on public display and by going
00:20:05in with dodie fayed and falling in love with him as i believe she absolutely did head over heels with
00:20:11the guy you've got the ultimate cocktail of danger for the british establishment perhaps it was unwise for
00:20:19diana and dodie to get together but they clearly felt deeply in love and thinking about the way their
00:20:23lives were prematurely snuffed out had a strangely melancholic effect on me that night
00:20:28i can't believe in love with you as the river flows gently to the sea
00:20:55and so we do something
00:20:59what i meant to be
00:21:02take my hand
00:21:07take my whole life too
00:21:12i can't get
00:21:17falling in love
00:21:20with you
00:21:24right from the start the circumstances surrounding the crash were suspicious
00:21:28within a day before tests on henry paul's blood had even been completed the french authorities had leaked a story to the press that this was a simple accident caused by a driver who was drunk as a pig although the only alcohol he seems to have consumed that night was two recards less than one quarter of the amount the french authorities claimed he'd drunk
00:21:46he certainly seemed sober minutes before he drove a mercedes and within hours of the crash
00:21:53french police had allowed a road sweeping van to wash away all the evidence
00:21:56what a coincidence
00:21:57what a coincidence
00:21:59that's exactly what the pakistan police did in 2007 when they immediately hosed down the place where benazir bruto was assassinated
00:22:03it's so much easier to claim that a death was just an accident if the evidence has been washed away
00:22:10it's like my electrician i was at home last week when he arrived told him what i was doing
00:22:17and he immediately turned around and said oh yeah but mi5 did that didn't they
00:22:22and the trouble is intelligent people believe this shit and get carried away with it i mean people do love a conspiracy theory don't they
00:22:34ah the gentleman of the press this is the only way most people get to know what's going on at the inquest and there's no doubt that almost all of the media had already reached their verdict long before the inquest started
00:22:45yet most of the hacks covering it didn't understand the detailed evidence they were hearing and had no idea of how the establishment was manipulating events behind the scenes and deciding what could and could not be said
00:23:00the coroner even prevented the jury from knowing about the state of the relationship between philip and diana the prince's letters were redacted as the court called it or censored into incomprehensibility as the rest of us call it
00:23:14when a close friend of diana's wanted to tell the inquest about deeply hostile letters that the prince had written to diana not long before her death she was forbidden to do so
00:23:23initially i had great hopes for the inquest until i got the gagging order on me
00:23:29somebody came in and said are you not allowed to mention the content of the prince philip letters
00:23:36and in effect there was it's like having gagging orders slapped on me the first one was making aspersions on her moral character it was doubting her faithfulness to charles before harry was born
00:23:53and you just wonder how many people have been paid off in this whole charade is not fully transparent there's a if i've had a gagging order other people have had a gagging order
00:24:05why weren't the press more suspicious well journalists have to answer to their editors who answer to their proprietors who all want knighthoods
00:24:14the upshot being that most journalists are instinctively pro-establishment and are unwilling to accept that the official story about diana's death just does not make sense
00:24:23well it's difficult to get a man to understand something when his salary depends on him not understanding it
00:24:29the most daunting aspect was the media attention and i seem to be on the front of a newspaper every single day
00:24:38and the higher the media puts you place you is the bigger the drop
00:24:46just after midnight on the 31st of august 1997
00:24:49diana and dodie left the paris ritz in a mercedes driven by henry paul
00:24:53diana sat in the rear right seat she habitually wore a seatbelt
00:24:57but on this occasion she did not put it on
00:25:00when the car was subsequently examined by a crash expert on behalf of the metropolitan police
00:25:05the rear right seatbelt was found to be defective
00:25:09had it been tampered with
00:25:11was this why diana was not wearing a seatbelt that night
00:25:15and why was the inquest not told about this
00:25:18some of the paparazzi outside the hotel set off in pursuit
00:25:22but their scooters and motorcycles were unable to keep up with the much more powerful people
00:25:26police evidence given at the inquest confirmed that by the time the mercedes entered the armor tunnel
00:25:33all the pursuing paparazzi had been left far behind
00:25:36yet eyewitnesses saw several motorcycles and a white fiat uno
00:25:41surrounding the mercedes and blocking its progress as it entered the tunnel
00:25:45there was a very bright flash then the white fiat uno collided with mercedes which lost control
00:25:52and crashed headfirst into a concrete pillar
00:25:54all the other vehicles have never been identified
00:25:57and they've certainly been excluded as being paparazzi because there was a very close analysis done
00:26:05of all the known paparazzi who were on duty that night and they could all be accounted for
00:26:12so who was riding those motorcycles who was driving the white fiat uno
00:26:18witnesses saw the mercedes being closely pursued and surrounded by several motorcycles as it drove into the armor tunnel
00:26:27now the jury in their verdict found that following vehicles were guilty of manslaughter
00:26:36the media read following vehicles and translated into paparazzi
00:26:41now the jury never said that
00:26:43so the question is who owned or who was driving the other vehicles either motorcycle or car
00:26:52the jury decided that these unidentified drivers had committed a criminal act
00:26:57so why are neither the french nor british police trying to trace these killers
00:27:04do mi6 kill people? are they allowed to?
00:27:09sir richard dearlap said he was unaware of mi6 ever having assassinated anyone
00:27:17when you have the head of the british security services
00:27:20calmly announcing we have never killed anybody in the last 50 years
00:27:24i laughed out loud
00:27:25what's the point of them then?
00:27:27you know we've all been to james bond movies thanks
00:27:29we know the security services do a lot of dark stuff
00:27:32so the idea that we're supposed to believe that in 50 years
00:27:35the british secret agents have never actually killed anyone
00:27:39i didn't believe it
00:27:40and so if you don't believe that
00:27:42where does that leave the rest of the establishment evidence?
00:27:45of all the lies told to the inquest the most absurd was that the british secret services have never killed anybody
00:27:52this shameless lie was exposed by richard tomlinson
00:27:55a former mi6 agent who gave evidence to the inquest by video link from france
00:28:00he couldn't come to britain because if he had he would have been instantly arrested
00:28:04tomlinson saw a secret mi6 plan to assassinate his serbian leader in a car crash in a tunnel
00:28:11by flashing a very bright light into the driver's eyes
00:28:14at first i just thought it was a joke and i refused to believe the officer when he told me about it
00:28:20because he first of all outlined it to him verbally
00:28:22and then i went back to see him a couple of days later on another matter
00:28:25and he sort of gave me a copy of that he showed me the minute
00:28:28to sort of prove that he hadn't been joking about it
00:28:31and so that's i remember that very clearly
00:28:35well there have been other times in my life where i have been involved in death yes
00:28:42but i can't talk about that
00:28:44curiously several witnesses who were near the alma tunnel at the time of the crash
00:28:50reported seeing a bright flash seconds before the collision
00:28:54have you ever driven at night when some careless driver is coming at you with his headlights on full beam
00:28:59imagine that a hundred times as bright in a narrow tunnel
00:29:04the result would be exactly what happened to diana and dodie's car
00:29:11i don't think many people would want me to be queen actually when i say many people
00:29:17i mean the establishment that i'm married into because they've decided that i'm a non-starter
00:29:31the question that haunts me is around the time of the crash that she wasn't taken more rapidly to a hospital
00:29:38there was a sort of time period that wasn't properly explained about her treatment on the ground
00:29:45the crash occurred at 12 23 a.m dodie and henry paul died instantly the bodyguard trevor reese was seriously injured
00:29:53diana was injured but was conscious and alert and had she received prompt hospital treatment
00:30:00she could well have survived but she didn't
00:30:02instead an ambulance containing dr jean-marc martino arrived at the scene
00:30:07although other ambulances were also present he took sole charge of the princess
00:30:11and made a series of bizarre and disturbing decisions that sealed her fate
00:30:15it took an astonishing 37 minutes after the crash for dr martino to remove the steel conscious diana
00:30:21from the mercedes and put her in his ambulance odd because the back of the car was undamaged
00:30:26it took an extraordinary 81 minutes after the crash before the ambulance even set off for the nearby hospital
00:30:32oddly it made no radio contact with ambulance hq throughout the journey
00:30:37it took an inexplicable one hour and 43 minutes after the crash before the ambulance arrived at the nearby hospital
00:30:45having traveled there at a snail's place on empty roads
00:30:48by then diana's life was ebbing away
00:30:54at the inquest experts agreed that her life could have been saved
00:30:57had it not been for the suspiciously slow and furtive actions of dr martino and his crew
00:31:02the other members of which have never been officially identified or interviewed
00:31:07there is no dispute that at about 12 26 the emergency services in paris were notified
00:31:14that there had been a serious car crash there were two dead too seriously injured
00:31:19so all we needed at 12 35 if i may say so through you was one call saying
00:31:26look i think we may have a real problem here please be at the ready
00:31:30that is precisely the conclusion that we would have put in our report
00:31:45the bbc's chief royal correspondent used to pay particularly close attention
00:31:53here's the guy that considers himself to be effectively the walter cronkite of british television
00:31:58he's in front of arguably the story of the decade it's unfolding but he doesn't even have to dig it up
00:32:03it's happening right in front of him and the guy falls asleep and not just once but several times
00:32:09i do things differently because i don't go by a rule book because i lead from the heart not the head
00:32:20and albeit that's got me into trouble in my work i understand that
00:32:24but someone's got to go out there and love people and show it
00:32:27whoever we are wherever we're from we should have noticed by now our behavior is dumb and if our chances
00:32:39expect to improve it's going to take a lot more than trying to remove the other race or the other whatever
00:32:42the planet all together
00:32:48they call it the earth which is a dumb kind of name but they named it right
00:32:51because we behave the same we are dumb all over
00:32:54dumb all over yes we are
00:32:57dumb all over here and far
00:32:59dumb all over black and white
00:33:01people we is not rap play
00:33:03there was a powerful reason why these secret services of britain france and america might have wanted diana dead
00:33:14it was diana's involvement in the campaign to ban landmines
00:33:18a worldwide movement to ban anti-personnel landmines gathered speed during 1996
00:33:23to everyone's surprise even the world's most powerful politician was sympathetic to the ban
00:33:28to end this carnage the united states will seek a worldwide agreement as soon as possible to end the use of all anti-personnel landmines
00:33:37diana princess of wales took up the cause with a vengeance
00:33:41in january 1997
00:33:43she visited angola resulting in the greatest photo opportunity that the landmine campaign had ever had
00:33:49one down
00:33:51firing
00:33:54her involvement caused huge anger amongst governments
00:33:58in britain government defense minister earl howe denounced her
00:34:01two newspapers this morning quoting under the minister described as a loose cannon
00:34:05simone simmons was with diana in february 1997
00:34:09when a government defense minister made a threatening phone call warning the princess to end her involvement with the campaign
00:34:15otherwise
00:34:17accidents could happen
00:34:19the phone went in her little lounge and she picked it up
00:34:22and then called me over
00:34:24and there was a voice
00:34:27that was in the middle of conversation
00:34:29saying
00:34:31don't meddle in things you know nothing about
00:34:33accidents can happen
00:34:35she went a bit pale
00:34:37she took it as a threat
00:34:39and she said that was nicolas soames
00:34:42i don't know his voice
00:34:45but it was very very plummy
00:34:47and she actually used a derogatory term
00:34:51she said doesn't you sound like he's talking with a cock in his mouth
00:34:55days before she died
00:34:57diana made another visit to landmine victims
00:35:00this time in bosnia
00:35:02again there was global press coverage
00:35:04which made her even more of an enemy
00:35:06to many powerful forces in the armaments industry
00:35:09diana was certain that her phones were being tapped by the british secret services
00:35:13every time she'd hear a click
00:35:15she used to say boys
00:35:17time to change the tape
00:35:19we now know that her calls were also being monitored by the american secret services
00:35:23after years of denial
00:35:25they finally admitted to having almost 1200 pages of transcripts
00:35:28although they refused to make most of them public
00:35:31claiming it would threaten national security
00:35:34her landmine campaign was clearly infuriating the armaments industry
00:35:37while her love affair with dodi fayed was infuriating the royal family in the british establishment
00:35:42so there were an awful lot of people who wanted diana and her muslim lover dead
00:35:47it's weird that at a time when you know the establishment can think of nothing worse
00:35:53than dodi fayed son of muhammad marrying and possibly impregnating diana
00:35:59that she's conducting a major international offensive against landmines
00:36:04with all the crippling economic problems that would bring for the british establishment again
00:36:11and america and america
00:36:14if you add all these to the mix then if you were ever going to do something dodgy to diana
00:36:19that's the time you would do it
00:36:21she'd become trouble as she used to say to me
00:36:23i'm trouble to them i won't go away i won't go quietly
00:36:26presidents have been killed for less
00:36:36i think it was an opportunist killing
00:36:41yeah they they had until september the 19th
00:36:44why till then
00:36:46because that was when the conference was going to take place in oslo on landmines
00:36:50less than three weeks after the crash the key oslo meeting began
00:36:55with diana out of the way most of the world's press didn't even bother to attend
00:36:59when they killed diana on the 31st of august
00:37:0219 days later
00:37:05bill clinton was the only western leader who voted against
00:37:09a ban on landmines
00:37:11something he would never have done
00:37:13if she was alive
00:37:14had he had to look in diana's eyes
00:37:16many investigators believe that this was the real reason diana was killed
00:37:20yet the coroner barely raised the issue
00:37:28knowledge is power
00:37:33in the years before princess diana was killed
00:37:36she told many people that the british establishment was planning to eliminate her
00:37:40oh of course diana was bumped off she knew she was going to be bumped off
00:37:43she always said she's not going to make old bones
00:37:47diana had left a note
00:37:49saying that she thought that somebody was going to kill her and that it would be in a car accident
00:37:55diana asked her lawyer told him that she had from a very confidential source in the palace
00:38:02prince philip planning to get rid of her in a car accident
00:38:07she wrote this letter to her butler paul burrell telling him that the royal family were planning her death
00:38:11diana said the same thing to her lawyer lord mishkin who made a note of a prediction
00:38:17this old british establishment lawyer realized that the note could have devastating consequences for the royal family
00:38:24so three weeks after her death he handed it to britain's chief policeman lord condom the police chief also realized its significance so he concealed it and kept it secret for three years
00:38:37the first question and and you've agreed is is there a legal obligation to hand over potentially relevant material there's an unequivocal answer to that which is yes
00:38:49agree
00:38:51yes i do
00:38:52that was britain's top policeman admitting that he broke the law by concealing this devastating evidence
00:38:58right i'm going to make it very plain to you lord condom that the reason why potentially relevant material was not handed over to the coroner is because
00:39:06you were sitting on it knowing that something had gone wrong in paris linked to the activities of british state agencies
00:39:13you are suggesting are you that lord condom was part of a criminal conspiracy
00:39:18well i'm suggesting yes that he's part of an agreement that is one of the most serious allegations that could ever be made of someone in my position and i unequivocally totally refuted as a blatant lie
00:39:31if in september 1997 this information had gone public nobody would have spoken
00:39:44anymore about the paparazzi about henry paul the only thing the whole world would have focused on would have been
00:39:54diana's fears diana's predictions on how she would be killed by the british establishment
00:40:04in 1995 diana summarized her fears in a phone call to a producer of this film
00:40:09if you're a strong woman in my environment you're a problem
00:40:13so i'm a hell of a problem i don't have time an awful lot of time for hobbies but
00:40:16keeping alive one of them keeping alive keeping alive keeping alive keeping alive
00:40:24sadly she signally failed in this quest
00:40:27lord condom wasn't the only senior policeman to hide the lawyer's note
00:40:31lord stevens his successor as police chief concealed it for a further three years
00:40:36both men broke the law
00:40:38both men were made lords by the queen
00:40:40i'd like to be a queen of people's hearts in people's hearts but i don't see myself being queen of this country
00:40:59diana died soon after arrival at the hospital and although she had been stripped of her royal status in life
00:41:04in death her corpse mysteriously became royal property
00:41:07within hours royal representatives had given orders for her body to be partially embalmed
00:41:12a process that conveniently made it impossible for anyone to tell if she had been pregnant
00:41:17attention then turned to the body of the driver henry paul
00:41:20before blood tests had even been completed the french authorities were already insisting that he was drunk as a pig
00:41:26although the only alcohol he is known to have consumed that night were two single recards
00:41:31this is on report minutes before the fatal crash
00:41:34far from looking drunk as a pig he seems to be sober as a judge
00:41:39an autopsy was carried out on henry paul's body by professor dominique lecomte
00:41:43a doctor who is notorious in france for covering up medical evidence that is likely to embarrass the state
00:41:49if her own account is to be believed she conducted the world's worst autopsy on the corpse of henry paul
00:41:55committing at least 58 basic errors
00:41:57every medical expert at the inquest agreed that her results were not only inept but biologically inexplicable too
00:42:05and that her report was untruthful
00:42:08we have professor lecomte giving an account of events which on the face of it cannot be true
00:42:13so you are pushing at an open door
00:42:15there are clear inconsistencies in professor lecomte's account
00:42:18the blood tests carried out by dr pepin were equally unbelievable
00:42:23we are all agreed that the explanation offered by dr pepin and professor lecomte together for carboxy haemoglobin concentrations in the blood samples is implausible and can be discounted
00:42:34yes so one is left with either analytical error or a mystery
00:42:42suspicions grew at the inquest that the blood tested by lecomte and pepin had not come from henry paul at all
00:42:48not least because it contained lethally high levels of carbon monoxide
00:42:51the professor you said you found it astonishing the similarity
00:42:581.73 1.74 1.75
00:43:03what are you suggesting there that that suggests to you that the results have been cooked or what
00:43:10that would be my interpretation
00:43:13you mentioned that one explanation is that the blood samples didn't in fact come from henry paul
00:43:17that's the most obvious explanation that it isn't actually only paul's blood we're looking at
00:43:23the idea of a classic switcheroo may sound far-fetched
00:43:26but every scientist involved in the inquest signed a joint statement saying that the blood test results for Henri Paul were biologically inexplicable
00:43:35professor lecomte and dr pepin refused to attend the inquest even though as citizens of the european union they were legally obliged to
00:43:42they were protected by the french government who publicly cited reasons of public order for the refusal
00:43:48however it has since emerged that the real reason was the protection of state secrets and the essential interests of the nation
00:43:57this is the law the ministry of justice has used to help and protect professor lecomte and dr pepin
00:44:05so the fact the legal fact is that there are state secrets that are protected and that professor lecomte and dr pepin know about
00:44:18in 2006 a team of scientists offered to carry out dna analysis on some of the samples to determine if the blood really was Henri Paul's
00:44:27they were told by the french authorities that the samples no longer exist
00:44:34well my husband's side were very busy stopping me
00:44:39diana was unstable
00:44:41they decided that was the problem
00:44:43the inquest spent weeks examining diana's love life in minute detail and considering whether she was pregnant when she died
00:44:56but why
00:44:58whether diana was pregnant or not
00:44:59or whether she was actually going to marry dirty fired or not is not important it's whether the establishment believed she was pregnant or believed she was going to marry dody
00:45:13that's important and there's no doubt at that moment the majority of them did believe both those things
00:45:20what did become clear was that within hours of diana's death her body was pumped full of embalming fluid so no pregnancy tests were possible and soon after she had her reproductive organs removed under the watchful eye of the royal coroner
00:45:34there is a trip the the you know the trip from paris
00:45:38how can you embalm a body
00:45:40and very short distance of travel
00:45:42why do you think they embalmed her to hide the pregnancy
00:45:44because they had to corrupt the body because she was pregnant she had to take all her guts
00:45:48so was diana pregnant at the time of her death
00:45:51we'll never know for sure
00:45:53because the french and british authorities destroyed the evidence
00:45:55and the blood tests which were taken when she arrived at the hospital
00:45:58and which could have confirmed if she had just become pregnant
00:46:00have mysteriously vanished
00:46:03but ask yourself this
00:46:05would the british establishment have allowed muslim blood to enter the royal lineage
00:46:11and how far would they be prepared to go
00:46:14to stop it happening
00:46:19deep down we see them now as an establishment that are capable of murder
00:46:23which is quite serious
00:46:30it's very bad
00:46:37it was a new solid blood read
00:46:39i just felt really sad
00:46:41i thought bloody hell
00:46:43what i've done for this bloody family
00:46:45if you want to be like me you've got to suffer
00:46:48yep you have to
00:46:50and then you get what you
00:46:52get what you want
00:46:53no get what you deserve perhaps
00:46:54there is no doubt that the entire inquest was skillfully manipulated by powerful unelected forces to the advantage of the royal family
00:47:11this could only happen because britain is in essence a monarchy not a democracy
00:47:17much of britain still operates on a system of unelected power
00:47:21and at its centre are the windsors the old aristocracy and their vast wealth
00:47:27just as in medieval times the royal family live a life of unfettered privilege
00:47:33with british taxpayers funding their lavish existence
00:47:35where do we get off on this argument only one family and by the way a highly unrepresentative family has the right to a seat to the head of stateship of our country
00:47:50now i think that is a fundamentally flawed argument and i don't know how it can be used in the modern world
00:47:56the idea of a hereditary ruler is as absurd as the idea of a hereditary mathematician
00:48:01officially the royal family cost british taxpayers 40 million pounds a year but that's just the tip of a very large iceberg
00:48:11the royal palaces are maintained by the taxpayer even private ones such as balmoral
00:48:17windsor castle is theirs too except of course when it burnt down when the bill for rebuilding it also fell on the public purse
00:48:23their wealth includes the vast royal art collection which is worth billions of pounds and belongs to the british people
00:48:29yet the people aren't allowed to see it
00:48:32in return the royal family refused to obey many british laws such as the 1968 race relations act
00:48:39as can be seen from this footage there are very few non-whites in the royal household
00:48:44indeed it is ironic that the ritual ceremony we are now watching is called trooping the colour
00:48:48because as you can observe there's barely a non-white face to be seen
00:48:55the royal family are notorious for their racism
00:48:57these phrases have all been said by the royals in public so god alone knows what they say in private
00:49:14this racism is nothing new there was a close relationship between the british royal family and the nazis during the 1930s
00:49:20details of which remain a closely guarded secret
00:49:24were you surprised when you started to find out about specifically the relationship with high-ranking nazis i mean phillips especially
00:49:35i was very surprised when i found out about phillips sisters and their connection to hitler
00:49:40the fact that the queen mother and her husband were inclined more towards hitler in the beginning
00:49:51so why does britain still tolerate its racist royal family
00:49:55the only serious argument that defenders of the monarchy can muster nowadays
00:49:59is that the royals are good for tourism and even that is suspect
00:50:02they're not good for tourism that's what they say
00:50:06whenever someone says that i always think right so countries that don't have a royal family then
00:50:11like ireland or france or america no tourists ever go there then
00:50:15because tourists would go to the top of the eiffel tower look out and go
00:50:18oh i don't know it's not a bad view but
00:50:20the lack of a monarch spoils it somehow
00:50:23despite presenting itself as a charming and picturesque relic of the past
00:50:26the royal family retains a ruthless grip on power in 21st century britain
00:50:31it presides over a corrupt and corrosive honours system
00:50:34that keeps tens of thousands of public officials in permanent obedience to the monarchy
00:50:39all hoping for a knighthood or an obe in return for a lifetime's loyal service
00:50:45these are the people who operate britain's system of government
00:50:49judges coroners civil servants police chiefs permanent private secretaries
00:50:52members of the secret services and privy councillors
00:50:57when i became a cabinet minister i was made a privy councillor
00:51:01you swear that you will protect the queen from all foreign prelates potentates and powers
00:51:07and you will report on colleagues if they're disloyal and so on
00:51:10and they read it to me and i said at the end i didn't say i didn't agree
00:51:14and they said you don't have to agree so i said what do you mean
00:51:16they said we've administered the oath
00:51:17now that phrase the administration of oaths which people would have heard means you're injected with the oath
00:51:23i've been injected with an oath
00:51:25the royals don't only use honours and oaths of allegiance to preserve their power
00:51:28they use intimidation too as diana found to her cost
00:51:32they demand absolute secrecy and loyalty from their subjects
00:51:35and they stifle dissent
00:51:36i think of the establishment our establishment as a kind of a legal um a legal mafia
00:51:44whose watchword really is the watchword of the of them of the real mafia omerta silence
00:51:53that's why many people regard them as gangsters
00:51:56gangsters in tiaras
00:51:58and given prince philip's nazi background is it really so unthinkable that those at the top of the present day british establishment might go to any lengths to rid themselves of a turbulent princess
00:52:09well anything good i ever did
00:52:16nobody ever said a thing never said well done or was it okay
00:52:20but if i tripped up which invariably i did
00:52:23because i was new at the game
00:52:25a ton of bricks came down on me
00:52:29still successful producer dodie wasn't he
00:52:33i mean what did he ever produce
00:52:36fuck all
00:52:38that's what he produced
00:52:40fuck all
00:52:42he produced his inquest by dying you know
00:52:45successfully getting himself killed
00:52:46it's just the typical rich man's son you know
00:52:49talentless son of a rich father then
00:52:51pisses all his dad's money out the wall
00:52:53you think of that stereotype and that's dodie
00:52:55the media called this the diana inquest
00:52:58forgetting that it was also an inquest into the death of dodie fayad
00:53:01in life dodie was described by the duke of edinburgh as an oily bedhopper
00:53:06in death he was dismissed by the press as a worthless playboy
00:53:10but the inquest revealed these descriptions to be wholly untrue
00:53:13he loved to make movies he liked that ability to make movies that was his chosen professor
00:53:20the other good thing that came out of the inquest
00:53:23why he was successful is that it cleared dodie's name
00:53:27the evidence was overwhelming about the kind of guy he was
00:53:31not a playboy actually straightforward really caring sensitive funny man and not a shit
00:53:36he was smart dodie he understood everything about his father's profession and his profession
00:53:44he told me on so many occasions i want to run a studio
00:53:49i want to have a studio of my own
00:53:53dodie first showed his cinematic talent in 1981 as executive producer of the oscar winning film chariots of fire
00:53:59but chariots of fire think of any british movie have four oscars in the same time
00:54:06so it's ostensibly a film about jew taking on the establishment
00:54:09that's right i mean the racism you know again and this is was unbelievable
00:54:15way of thinking that he have the idea
00:54:17following the crash in 1997 there was an outpouring of grief for diana in the press
00:54:23but the media virtually ignored muhammad al-fayed's devastation over the loss of his son dodie
00:54:28i've seen him crying telling me how he shared a bed with dodie every day of his life from 2 to 13
00:54:34after his mother left when you hear things like that you know how close they were
00:54:37despite lasting six months and claiming to be an in-depth investigation the inquest failed to find answers to many basic questions regarding Henri Paul
00:54:58if he really was a chronic alcoholic this would have been diagnosed during the stringent medical examination he underwent three days before the crash while renewing his pilot's license
00:55:12but he passed the medical with flying colors
00:55:15so why wasn't the doctor who gave him a clean bill of health called to the inquest or ever interviewed by the police
00:55:20why did britain's top policeman lord stevens tell Henri Paul's parents in 2006 in front of other policemen who kept a written record of the conversation that their son was definitely not drunk
00:55:33he asserted that Henri was not drunk on the evening of the accident and that he was driving at a lower speed than indicated in the french proceedings
00:55:41that is totally what mr stevens told us
00:55:44yet six weeks later lord stevens published a report claiming that Henri Paul was drunk
00:55:50so who was lying lord stevens or lord stevens
00:55:55after the crash the police searched Henri Paul's apartment twice
00:55:59two searches were made of Henri Paul's home by the french police
00:56:04more alcohol was recorded as discovered on the second search
00:56:09than on the first
00:56:10the first time all the police found was an unopened bottle of champagne and a quarter bottle of martini
00:56:16which hardly supports the claim that he was an alcoholic
00:56:19so the police returned a few days later
00:56:21and would you believe it
00:56:23this time they claimed to have found enough alcohol to stock an entire bar
00:56:27beer, wine, Ricard, bourbon, vodka, port, champagne, cassis, pinot
00:56:31there is no obvious explanation for this
00:56:35you must consider whether there are any sinister implications
00:56:40some might say that on the contrary there is a very obvious explanation
00:56:46and that its implications are very sinister indeed
00:56:49the inquest heard undisputed evidence of Henri Paul's links to the french secret services
00:56:53the Direction de la surveillance du territoire and to Britain's MI6
00:56:59I just remember reading this file and thinking it was interesting that first of all
00:57:03I had a Frenchman working for MI6 because it's actually quite rare to find someone who is French
00:57:08who prepared to work for MI6 because they quite often don't
00:57:11and secondly I because I'm a pilot myself I remember this particular person having an interest in flying
00:57:16so why did the coroner tell the jury in his summing up that Henri Paul had no links to the security services
00:57:22Henri Paul's bank accounts show he received a total of 350,000 French francs of unexplained income during the final months of his life
00:57:30mostly from cheques
00:57:32why didn't the inquest establish who had written those cheques or examine the transactions made on Henri Paul's five credit cards
00:57:38or allow the jury to see his mobile phone records
00:57:40why did Henri Paul go missing from the hotel for seven minutes at 10.36?
00:57:45was he meeting an accomplice in the Place Vendôme?
00:57:48what about the gesture that Henri Paul made outside the Ritz moments before driving off in the Mercedes?
00:57:53was it a signal to an accomplice?
00:57:56if the inquest had failed to answer one or two of these simple questions
00:58:00you might put it down to incompetence
00:58:02but its failure even to ask many of them can only have happened because the authorities already knew the answers
00:58:07and wanted to keep them hidden
00:58:10Henri Paul was not drunk
00:58:12and was working for the secret services on the night that he died
00:58:18day 68
00:58:20the only senior representative of the royal household to appear at the inquest was Sir Robert Fellows
00:58:26the Queen's private secretary
00:58:28on day 68 while under oath
00:58:31he had the following interchange with Michael Mansfield
00:58:33were you on holiday at the time?
00:58:37I was on holiday from early well somewhere around the first week of August
00:58:42until
00:58:44the week after the death of the princess and Mr. Al-Fayed
00:58:49and I went back to Balmoral on the following Sunday I think after the funeral
00:58:53so would it be fair to say that you were not in fact therefore
00:58:57at the palace or nearby when all of this was happening?
00:59:01I was at the palace certainly until the end of July
00:59:07Fellows unequivocally told the inquest that he was on holiday for the entire period before and after Diana's death
00:59:14and did not return to work until after her funeral
00:59:16now let's move to January 2011
00:59:20and the publication of the diary of Tony Blair's press secretary Alastair Campbell
00:59:2731st August
00:59:30at about 4am I got a flavour of the royal establishment's approach
00:59:34when I had a conference call with Robert Fellows
00:59:36you know about Diana do you? She's dead
00:59:38it was all very matter of fact
00:59:411st of September
00:59:42meeting at the Lord Chamberlain's office
00:59:43attended by Robert Fellows
00:59:452nd of September
00:59:4610am
00:59:47Fellows and I had a discussion
00:59:483rd of September
00:59:50Fellows called early
00:59:514th of September
00:59:52I had another discussion with Fellows
00:59:535th of September
00:59:55Fellows said we had all worked well together
00:59:57Far from being on holiday as he had claimed under oath
01:00:01Fellows was at the very centre of Diana's funeral arrangements
01:00:05overseeing her burial throughout the week
01:00:06Fellows was the man that Diana had described to friends as
01:00:10one of the three names that I fear
01:00:12he hates me
01:00:13he will do anything to get me out of the royals
01:00:17Sir Robert Fellows was made a Lord in 1998
01:00:36this little boy is called Philip
01:00:40his full name is Philip Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderberg-Gluchtsberg
01:00:45and he grew up in Germany
01:00:47he was raised amongst his Nazi in-laws
01:00:49some of whom later became high ranking members of the SS
01:00:52his Nazi relatives then sent him to this school in southern Germany
01:00:57where he studied for a while under the Nazi curriculum
01:01:00Philip later recalled that there was much heel clicking
01:01:02and shouts of Heil Hitler were compulsory
01:01:05and here's Philip
01:01:07in Darmstadt
01:01:09in the heart of Germany in November 1937
01:01:11attending a family funeral for some of his Nazi in-laws
01:01:14marching in front of a Siegheilin crowd
01:01:17this is Philip next to Christoph
01:01:19his SS brother-in-law
01:01:21and Philip his Nazi stormtrooper brother-in-law
01:01:23imagine if a man with a past like this
01:01:25had somehow ended up marrying into British aristocracy
01:01:30well, he did
01:01:32and as we know
01:01:34he got first prize
01:01:37he became the Duke of Edinburgh
01:01:40also known as Prince Philip
01:01:42after marrying Princess Elizabeth
01:01:44the future Queen of England
01:01:51British lawyers have warned us of 87 legal issues concerning this film
01:01:55several of those warnings concerned the following interview
01:01:59I think Prince Philip is somebody who is devoid of any internal sense of right and wrong
01:02:06so deep down he cares nothing about anybody else
01:02:10he regards everybody else as potentially a threat
01:02:13he is completely selfish
01:02:15and that is very like Fred West or any other psychopathic individual
01:02:20Oliver James is one of Britain's leading clinical psychologists
01:02:24yet lawyers told us that we could not include his professional diagnosis of Prince Philip in this film
01:02:29so we looked for the current medical definition of psychopathy
01:02:32and discovered that most psychopaths are not convicted criminals but function normally in society
01:02:36we also found that psychopaths tend to gravitate towards highly paid professions
01:02:40such as the legal profession and, oh dear, us, filmmakers
01:02:46Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip have traditionally been presented to the public as role models for the rest of society
01:02:51but why?
01:02:52certainly, I mean, Philip's been in half the beds of England including two of his wife's close family
01:02:57but, er, who?
01:02:59do you want me to say that?
01:03:00yes, go on
01:03:01princess Margaret and princess Alexander
01:03:03stop it
01:03:05I don't think that she was somebody who was a kind of, would have wanted to marry a psychopath
01:03:10I think she must have got a very nasty shock when she found out quite how unpleasant he is
01:03:14but, obviously, being the sort of person she is
01:03:17she said, well, that's it, you know, I've got to stick with this and da-da-da
01:03:19and he's going to shag anything that moves and I can't do anything about that
01:03:22that's what they all do anyway, isn't it?
01:03:24Almost everyone has heard rumours about Prince Philip's innumerable extramarital affairs
01:03:27yet newspapers have never published full reports
01:03:30whereas they routinely expose the affairs of pop stars, footballers and other celebrities
01:03:34why?
01:03:36because in Britain, the media dare not challenge the authority of those at the very top
01:03:41I have a friend of mine who was at a party where he was, where he had to observe the disgusting sight of Prince Philip wearing a leather jacket
01:03:49dancing to a stone song with his hand halfway up the skirt of some young woman
01:03:55this is, you know, and that's not an unusual event at all for Prince Philip, he's done that sort of thing many times
01:04:02this isn't a question of morality, it's a question of media cowardice
01:04:06the British press usually love nothing more than exposing the peccadilloes of eminent people
01:04:11all except senior members of the royal family who are mysteriously exempt
01:04:16funny though
01:04:18you may think that we should have given Prince Philip a right of reply in this film
01:04:21well we did, but he declined our invitation as did the entire royal family
01:04:28and they are not the only ones
01:04:30in fact, if you're wondering why you're not hearing from any members of the British establishment in this film
01:04:35it's certainly not for want of trying on our part
01:04:38we asked all of these pillars of the establishment to take part
01:04:41and they all refused
01:04:43I wonder why
01:04:44what you are seeing is what the CCTV camera at the entrance to the armor tunnel was recording at the time of the crash
01:05:00nothing
01:05:02because it was switched off
01:05:04even though it was usually switched on 24 hours a day
01:05:08was that just another coincidence?
01:05:10or something more sinister?
01:05:12well you do ask a good question
01:05:14you say how is it that every single traffic camera
01:05:17in that tunnel was switched off for not working?
01:05:20even though no cameras recorded the crash
01:05:23it is beyond doubt that a white Fiat Uno collided with Dodie and Diana's car in the tunnel
01:05:28and contributed to their deaths
01:05:30the French police tried to deny its existence at first
01:05:32but too many eyewitnesses saw it and paintwork from a white Fiat Uno was found on the Mercedes
01:05:37where the two cars had collided
01:05:39so, who was driving it?
01:05:41suspicions fell on James Anderson, a photographer with connections to the secret services
01:05:47he had been following Dodie and Diana earlier in the month during their holiday in the Mediterranean
01:05:52but he was not amongst the paparazzi who were waiting outside the Paris Ritz on the night of the crash
01:05:56Anderson was a millionaire paparazzo, a very well-known member of the paparazzi on the continent
01:06:07made a great deal of money out of royal pictures
01:06:10lived in some style in the French countryside
01:06:12he told police that he wasn't in Paris on the night of the crash
01:06:16but gave two completely different accounts of where he had been
01:06:19his wife and son also gave him contradictory alibis
01:06:23privately, he told friends that he had been there in the tunnel in Paris that night
01:06:28crucially, Anderson owned a white Fiat Uno
01:06:32it was said of this Fiat Uno that it was up on chocks and didn't work
01:06:36well that appears to be untrue too
01:06:38it was driven many hundreds of miles around the French countryside
01:06:41so the whole question of the Fiat Uno and who was driving it
01:06:44which is of course absolutely crucial
01:06:45totally crucial to the investigation has never been resolved and you have to say, why?
01:06:54In May 2000, Anderson's body was found in a blazing car in woodland near Montpellier
01:07:00in a Ministry of Defence field, shooting wage field
01:07:04in a car which was burned out
01:07:07and locked but no keys were in the car or in his pocket
01:07:11and the police claimed he had committed suicide
01:07:17they claimed this even though the fireman who found him says he saw two bullet holes in Anderson's skull
01:07:23you don't have to be a conspiracy theorist to point out that it's difficult for a man to shoot himself twice in the head
01:07:30and then set fire to his own car before dying
01:07:31I would like a monarchy that has more contact with its people
01:07:40by the end of the inquest, so much suspicious evidence had been heard that the establishment coroner could take no chances
01:07:45so he prevented the jury even considering murder as an option
01:07:59his summing up lasted almost three days, during which he continually distorted the evidence
01:08:04ignored much of the eyewitness evidence and tried to convince the jury that the crash was nothing more than an accident
01:08:10at the start, I told you it was not necessary to solve every subplot in the story
01:08:16there are certain matters relating to Henri Paul that simply cannot be resolved with any clarity
01:08:23you have not heard in person from Professor Le Compe, Dr. Pepin and others concerned with the analysis of Henri Paul's samples
01:08:30in common with most road traffic accidents, this collision did not appear to have a single cause
01:08:40the relationship between Diana and Dodie had reached the point where it could no longer be tolerated
01:08:46the conspiracy theory has been minutely examined and shown to be without any substance
01:08:55will you please now retire to consider your verdicts
01:08:58but the one thing the establishment and the royal courts couldn't fix was the jury
01:09:0311 ordinary men and women who ignored the coroner's one-sided summing up
01:09:07and instead spent almost a week examining the evidence for themselves
01:09:11Richard Wiseman, diary entry
01:09:14it's day 93 and we're still waiting for the verdict
01:09:18nobody around me can understand why the jury are taking so long
01:09:21the hacks all expected a verdict of accidental death to be returned within seconds
01:09:25did you see those sandwiches they just took in for the jury
01:09:29yeah I mean my worry is they look far too good
01:09:32you know if they'd given them some curled up shite
01:09:35you know they'd agree by two
01:09:37give the verdict by three and be owned by four
01:09:39the fact is it's becoming painfully obvious that the jury
01:09:42unlike the press
01:09:44bothered to listen to the evidence
01:09:46and they are now analysing it very very carefully
01:09:48a year after the inquest into the deaths of princess Diana and Dodi al-Fayed
01:09:59we asked a cross section of ordinary people what the jury's verdict was
01:10:03accidental death purely an accident
01:10:05it was accident was accidental accidental death
01:10:08it was an accident accidental death I believe
01:10:09it was an actual accident accidental death
01:10:11accidental death
01:10:13the answers the public gave us were uniformly inaccurate
01:10:17they said the paparazzi did they
01:10:19the paparazzi chasing her
01:10:21I think yes the paparazzi
01:10:23around the world people have been massively misled by the British media
01:10:27into believing that the deaths were an accident caused by the paparazzi
01:10:30but in reality the jury did not blame the paparazzi
01:10:33and they decided that the crash was not a mere accident but something much more serious
01:10:37in the end the jury delivered the most powerful verdict that the coroner had left open to them
01:10:43unlawful killing is defined in law as homicide or manslaughter
01:10:47and the jury blamed the following vehicles not the paparazzi
01:10:52what is also interesting overlooked I think almost totally by the media and commentators
01:11:00was the wording of the verdict
01:11:02well the detail of this verdict was such that it was an unlawful killing
01:11:07contributed to by and one of the factors was following vehicles not the paparazzi
01:11:15initially journalists were confused but within minutes the BBC was reporting that the jury had blamed the paparazzi
01:11:22and the rest of the media followed the example of the British establishment's impartial broadcaster
01:11:26soon the verdict had been spun by the media into an accident caused by the paparazzi
01:11:33and so a lie got half way around the world while the truth was still putting its boots on
01:11:41the altered verdict was still on the BBC's news website at the time of making this documentary
01:11:46whether it was a case that the commentators in the end wanted it to be the paparazzi
01:11:54and so immediately assumed that and hadn't and often some of them didn't really follow it
01:12:00on a daily basis they might read in the odd transcript and certainly a change of that kind
01:12:04which was very important because following vehicles was a much bigger category than just paparazzi because of the reasons I've just given
01:12:15that nobody nobody either wanted to understand what that meant or if they did weren't prepared to include it in their commentary
01:12:22the media declared that Mohammed Al-Fayed had been defeated but in reality the jury's verdict supported what he'd been saying all along
01:12:32Diana and Dodie were unlawfully killed
01:12:362011 and the British media after seriously misreporting the verdict refused even to discuss what the verdict really means
01:12:45their deafening silence speaks volumes about the deeply troubling outcome
01:12:50there was a feeling of openness about it and yet at the end of it I have to say
01:12:57even as a supposedly educated scientific person I would still say I don't feel any you know that at all confident that it got to the bottom of it
01:13:06people will still go on thinking there is something happening here because they know the British establishment they know their capacity for cover-ups
01:13:13the newspapers in this country really don't want to upset the very top
01:13:17the most bizarre thing is that normal people in this country who don't necessarily enjoy conspiracy theories
01:13:24if you if you go if you go to a bar you'll find three people go ooh but the royals did it didn't they
01:13:30I think most of the British public still believe it was dodgy
01:13:35I believe Mohammed Al-Fayed will always believe it's dodgy
01:13:37I believe the establishment wanted all to just go away for whatever reason and I don't know the answers to these questions
01:13:44all I know is that the inquest has probably raised more questions than in the end it answered and it answered a lot of questions
01:13:51I would still say it was fantastically convenient for the monarchy that this woman died just think what she might be saying now if she hadn't died think what a problem it would have created for Camilla
01:14:06think of you know it would have created serious constitutional problems that even she was perfectly capable of being somebody who started a movement to end the monarchy
01:14:14the full facts about the alma tunnel crash may never be known but we do know this for certain
01:14:23Dodie and Diana were the victims of an unlawful killing and various parts of the establishment with their unerring instinct for mutual self-preservation then seem to have rallied around to cover it up
01:14:34they covered for each other and suppressed uncomfortable facts and they think that they have got away with it
01:14:39the British establishment think that they have got away with murder but then what's new they've been getting away with murder for centuries
01:14:55since the crash some curious things have happened Charles has married Camilla as he'd always wanted to
01:15:01MI6 now publicly admit that they have been involved in killings
01:15:08Diana has been airbrushed out of official royal history
01:15:12no action has been taken against the police chiefs who suppress Diana's sworn statement predicting that the royal family would kill her in a car crash
01:15:20instead they both now sit in the House of Lords
01:15:23Mohammed Al-Fayed was ordered by Prince Philip to take down the royal warrants that had hung for decades outside Harrods
01:15:33and shortly before selling the store in 2010 and more in sorrow than in anger
01:15:38he symbolically burned them inside of his son's grave
01:15:41I am destroying this royal crest as a tribute to my son Dodie
01:15:47I feel that he is looking down on this today
01:15:57there was a clear verdict of unlawful killing
01:16:04so why has nobody been arrested
01:16:08what is at the core of all this is racism
01:16:12powerful people in this country
01:16:16my country
01:16:18don't want to hear me talking about Prince Philip's
01:16:21Nazi background
01:16:23but I have to
01:16:25because
01:16:26it's just
01:16:28100% true
01:16:42they wouldn't accept me
01:16:46or my son
01:16:48and when he fell in love with Diana
01:16:51they murdered them
01:16:57Despite obtaining a verdict that vindicates his years of struggle
01:17:00Mohammed Al-Fayed fights on
01:17:02still grieving for his son
01:17:04he has opted for truth rather than happiness
01:17:06legal action is continuing in France against the police chiefs who suppressed vital evidence
01:17:13and the establishment cover-up is being steadily exposed day by day
01:17:17truth will out
01:17:20and as more and more people come to understand what the damning inquest verdict really means
01:17:25we may soon witness what the British establishment fears most
01:17:30the end of the monarchy
01:17:32the end of the monarchy
01:18:02of correlatching that
01:18:06by January
01:18:07departs
01:18:09by PlayStation
01:18:10June
01:18:11?
01:18:13?
01:18:17That is
01:18:20a
01:18:23Juliet
01:18:24?
01:18:26?
01:18:29?
01:18:30?
01:18:31?
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