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Oct 20 2003 Daily Mirror
DIANA LETTER SENSATION: 'THEY
WILL TRY TO KILL ME'
By Jane Kerr, Royal reporter
PRINCESS DIANA claimed there was a plot to kill her in a car
crash in a handwritten letter only 10 months before she died. She
gave it to her butler Paul Burrell with orders that he should
keep it as "insurance" for the future.
The princess predicted: gThis
particular phase in my life is the most dangerous.h She said "XXXXXXXXXXX is planning ean accidentf in my car, brake failure and serious head
injury in order to make the path clear for Charles to marryh.
In the letter, revealed by the Daily Mirror today, Diana named
who she believed was plotting to kill her. But the Mirror is not
able to repeat the allegation for legal reasons so we have
blanked that part of the letter out.
The document will fuel the
conspiracy theories which have raged in the six years since she
was killed in a Paris car crash.
But it also appears to bring fresh importance to a warning by the
Queen that there were gpowers
at work in this country about which we have no knowledgeh.
The Queen was speaking to Burrell at Buckingham Palace in a
meeting that would prove crucial in the collapse of his trial for
theft.
Now, plagued by that meeting and deeply troubled that there has
still been no inquest in Britain into the death of Diana and her
boyfriend Dodi Fayed, Burrell has come forward with the stunning
new evidence.
In his new book A Royal Duty the former servant - cleared last
year of stealing Dianafs
possessions - claims she began to worry about her security TWO
YEARS before her death and that this led her to record her fears
in the document.
Before sealing the letter in an envelope marked gPaulh,
the princess told him: gIfm going to date this and I want you to
keep it ... just in case.h
In the second paragraph of the
document, written in October 1996, Diana explained in the
plainest possible language that she was convinced of the plot to
mastermind an accident.
Burrell describes in his book the events that led the princess to
write the document at her desk in Kensington Palace.
Dianafs divorce from Prince
Charles had been finalised less than two months earlier.
The princess, who had cut down on her charities to focus on Aids,
leprosy and victims of homelessness, was enjoying huge public
support.
But according to Burrell, by the autumn of 1996 she had gan overpowering feeling that she was ein the wayf.h
He adds: gRightly or
wrongly she felt the stronger she became, the more she was
regarded as a modernising nuisance.
gShe certainly felt that ethe systemf didnft appreciate her work and that for as long
as she was on the scene Prince Charles could never properly move
on.h
Burrell says the princess told him: gI have become strong and they donft like it when I am able to do good and
stand on my own two feet without them.h
THE princessfs anxiety
deepened to such an extent that she ordered a sweep of her
apartments at Kensington Palace for listening devices.
By October 1996 she once again confided in Burrell that she
believed there was a concerted attempt to undermine her in the
publicfs eyes.
She recalled that she had been
brooding about Charlesfs
relationship with Camilla Parker Bowles and the continuing role
of Tiggy Legge Bourke, nanny to Princes William and Harry, in the
Royal Household.
Burrell says the princess was feeling gundervalued and unappreciatedh. But at the root of her fears she said
she was constantly puzzledh
by attempts by Prince Charlesfs supporters to gdestroy herh.
With these thoughts and fears in her head, Diana decided to put
her fears to paper, says Burrell.
The letter betrays the loneliness Diana was feeling: gI am sitting here at my desk today in
October, longing for someone to hug me and encourage me to keep
strong and hold my head high.h According to Burrell it was not the first
time Diana had felt it neccessary to record what was happening to
her. He said: I became the repository for royal truths.
gThese notes are her legacy
and are crucial to the truths that enshrine her memory and debunk
the damaging myths that seem to have been peddled since the day
she died.h
Diana and Dodi Fayed were killed in the early hours of August 31
1997 when a Mercedes S280 driven by drunken chauffeur Henri Paul
careered into the Pont dfAlma
tunnel in the French capital.
An inquiry in 1999 by the French authorities blamed Paul,
concluding that he had taken a cocktail of drink and drugs before
losing control of the car because he was speeding.
However, there has been a growing unwillingness by the public to
accept the official version of her death.
BURRELL admitted he shares the doubts. He said: gWith the benefit of hindsight, the content
of that letter has bothered me since her death.h
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It will strike a chord among people who remain puzzled by
inconsistences in her death, including questions over a
mysterious white Fiat Uno which grazed the Mercedes in the tunnel
and over blood samples taken from Henri Paul.
Harrods owner Mohamed Al Fayed, Dodifs father, has spent tens of thousands of
pounds on a private investigation, convinced that Diana and Dodi
were murdered by British security services at the behest of
Establishment forces.
But Dianafs family refuse
to believe the theories. Her mother Frances Shand Kydd accepted
the findings of the French inquiry gwithout reservationh.
Dianafs brother Earl
Spencer also said he was satisfied that the authorities had greached the right conclusionh.
Hopes that some of the mysteries would be unravelled were dashed
last month.
A spokesman for the royal coroner Michael Burgess said the date
for an inquest on Diana would be announced within days.
But hours later Mr Burgess ordered the statement to be withdrawn,
saying it was prematureh to
suggest a date and refusing to give a timescale.
The lack of an inquest and his prosecution for theft in 2002
steeled Burrellfs
determination to make public the princessfs concerns for her security.
gThat letter has been part
of the burden I have carried since the princessfs death. Knowing what to do with it has
been a source of much soul-searching.h
He insists that whether it is a wild coincidenceh or an explanation for the tragedy is a
matter for a coronerfs
court.
He adds: gIt may be futile
in what it achieves because it can do no more than provide yet
another question mark.
gBut if that question mark
leads to an inquest and a thorough investigation of the facts by
the British authorities it will have achieved something.h