Princess Diana and Dodi murdered? Mohamed al-Fayed says Yes. Prince Phillip a Nazi
79Al-Fayed
Did English Royalty kill Princess Diana and Dodi al-Fayed
It would appear that after all these years the truth about Diana's murder is about to come out. Admissions of purgery and additional facts being brought out are sure to rock the Royalty of England. Dodi Al-Fayed and Princess Diana were murdered, probably while Diana was with child.
Prince Phillip—a “Nazi” who should be sent “back to Germany from where he comes”—headed a royal family plot to murder Princess Diana and his son, Dodi Al Fayed's father told the Diana inquest today. “You want to know his original name—It ends with Frankenstein,” Mohamed Al Fayed said of Phillip. • Fayed laid out the entire conspiracy theory he has spent years putting forth, explaining that one of the paparazzi was a secret service employee, that the driver was not drunk but was in on the plot, and that Diana told him personally on the phone she was pregnant, a fact revealed only to him. “I have been fighting for 10 years to be where we are,” he said.
Mohamed al-Fayed is not keeping to himself about the 1997 tragic car crash that lead to the death of his son Dodi and Princess Diana. When it was Mohamed’s time to speak at the $20 million inquest into Diana and Dodi’s deaths, he had a great deal to say. He has accused the British royal family of “slaughtering” the people’s princess.
Fayed said that British security services were ordered to murder the Princess by her ex-father in-law, Prince Philip. Many shocking statements were made by Dodi’s father who was quoted as saying, “Diana told me on the telephone she was pregnant,” he said. “I am the only person they told. They told me they were engaged and would announce their engagement on Monday morning.” That would have been 3 days after the infamous car crash.
Mohamed also believes that Prince Charles and his new wife Camilla Parker Bowles both new exactly what was going to happen. They had this planned so that they would be able to marry. The billionaire didn’t stop there. He also said that he thinks that Prime Minister Tony Blair also had a hand in the killing.
Al Fayed, who testified Monday at a coroner's inquest that "dark forces" of the Establishment would not accept a marriage between a princess and a Muslim, named a cast of what he called conspirators, including Prince Philip, Prince Charles, former Prime Minister Tony Blair and Diana's sister, Sarah McCorquodale.
He also accused Diana's brother-in-law Robert Fellowes; two former chiefs of London police; driver Henri Paul; the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency; Diana's attorney, the late Lord Mischon; two French toxicologists; members of the French medical service; and three bodyguards he once employed as being part of the alleged murder plot and cover-up.
Al Fayed lashed out at Prince Philip, saying he believed he was a racist and a Nazi and that he should go "back to Germany" — a reference to the prince's German ancestors. "You want to know his original name? It ends with Frankenstein," he added.
Asked if Queen Elizabeth II was in on the plot, he said: "I do not think the queen is important in that."
Charles' interest, Al Fayed claimed, was to get Diana out of the way so that he could marry Camilla Parker Bowles. "They finished her, they murdered her and now he is happy. He married his crocodile wife and he is happy with that," he said.
Those who disagreed with Al Fayed were dismissed as either conspirators or liars.
"Do you ever pay any attention whatsoever to the evidence, Mr. Al Fayed?" said Richard Horwell, representing the Metropolitan Police.
Horwell ridiculed key parts of Al Fayed's theory — that Diana was pregnant, that she and Dodi Fayed were victims of a complex conspiracy, and even that James Andanson, the paparazzi photographer who Al Fayed contends was an assassin dispatched by a wealthy Establishment, drove a white Fiat Uno.
"Can you help as to why the might and power of the royal family, the British government and MI6 chose a Fiat Uno, one of the world's lightest and least powerful cars?" Horwell said.
"Well, and a clapped-out Fiat Uno," added the coroner, Lord Justice Scott Baker.
"Well it's his own car and he chose to use his own car," Al Fayed said.
Investigators say that the couple's car did collide with a white Fiat, probably near the scene of the accident, but French police were never able to find the car.
Recalling testimony of two witnesses who said they saw a dog in a white Fiat, Horwell asked: "Can you help as to why Mr. Andanson elected to take his dog on a criminal enterprise ?"
Horwell also asked why, if the Establishment wouldn't countenance a Muslim, Diana had not been killed during her relationship of at least 18 months with Pakistani heart surgeon Hasnat Khan.
Though several witnesses have described Diana's relationship with Khan as intense, Al Fayed dismissed it as "nothing serious."
"How can she marry someone like that, who lives in a council flat (public housing) and has no money?" Al Fayed said.
Horwell attacked Al Fayed's account of a telephone conversation with the princess and his son less than two hours before the crash.
Horwell said that would have been the first chance for any conspirators to learn, according to Al Fayed, that his son and Diana were getting engaged and that Diana was pregnant. Al Fayed asked what his point was.
"It is important, Mr. Al Fayed, because this extraordinarily elaborate conspiracy has but minutes to be formed and to be put into operation," Horwell said.
"Prince Philip has to be told, Prince Philip has to issue the order, MI6, MI5, the French security services, the CIA, the ambulance service, the French doctors, the French scientists, James Andanson and his dog — all have to come together in a matter of minutes," Horwell said.
Al Fayed said he had been thwarted in attempts to prove his theory.
"How can you want me to get the proof?" Al Fayed said. "I am facing a steel wall of the security service, Official Secrets Act. How can you tell me?"
Last week, Al Fayed's security chief, John Macnamara, testified that he had no evidence implicating Prince Philip, or that the British ambassador in Paris ordered Diana's body embalmed to cover up a pregnancy.
The coroner asked Al Fayed if it was possible that he was wrong.
"No way, one hundred percent," Al Fayed said.
"I am certain. I am the father who lost his son. And I know exactly the situations. I know exactly the facts."
Al Fayed denies that Henri Paul, an employee of Al Fayed's Ritz Hotel, was drunk, but contended that Paul was an MI6 agent who had been instructed by his handler to take an unusual route from the hotel to Dodi Fayed's apartment.
"When he (Paul) was killed, they find 20,000 francs in his pocket, because he disappeared three hours before the murder, being briefed what to do, duped exactly," Al Fayed said.
"Just because he was so stupid, he listened, he does not know he was going to be killed," Al Fayed added.
Al-Fayed - Royals killed my son and Diana
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Prince Phillip and Prince Charles knew about Diana's murder
Princess Diana and Dodi Al Fayed were murdered, Dodi's father Mohamed Al Fayed has told the inquest into their deaths in a car crash in Paris in 1997.
Harrods owner Mr Al Fayed claimed former prime minister Tony Blair, MI5, MI6 and the British ambassador to France were all part of the conspiracy. And he said Princess Diana "knew Prince Philip and Prince Charles were trying to get rid of her". He also said Diana had told him she was pregnant, and the couple were engaged. "I am the only person they told," he said. 'Crocodile wife' Asked by Ian Burnett QC, counsel to the inquest, if he stood by his claim that Diana and Dodi were "murdered by the British security services on the orders of Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh", Mr Al Fayed replied: "Yes." He also pinpointed alleged security forces in the ambulance crew, the then British Ambassador to France Sir Michael Jay and the princess's brother-in-law Sir Robert Fellowes as all being involved in the plot. And he said Prince Charles was complicit, hoping to make way so he could marry his "crocodile wife" Camilla Parker Bowles. The Harrods boss also raised concerns about a note written by Diana's divorce lawyer, Lord Mishcon, after an October 1995 meeting. It outlined her fears there was a plot to kill her in a car crash. The police agreed to hand it to the coroner only after Diana's former butler, Paul Burrell, produced a note from the princess making similar allegations in the Daily Mirror in October 2003. By that time, Sir John Stevens led the Met. Mr Al Fayed said this delay confirmed his "belief that my son and Princess Diana were murdered". In his evidence, Mr Al Fayed branded Prince Philip a "Nazi" and a "racist" and said: "It's time to send him back to Germany from where he comes." "You want to know his original name - it ends with Frankenstein," he added. Wooden box Mr Al Fayed read out a statement detailing his main concerns about the crash, and the points he felt the inquest should address. Diana had told him she kept a wooden box and if anything happened to her, the contents should be made public, he said. But it had not been kept safe by Diana's butler Paul Burrell, or her sister, Lady Sarah McCorquodale. He also said blood samples apparently taken from driver Henri Paul - who was also killed in the crash - did not belong to the Frenchman. Mr Al Fayed felt the murder was likely to have been carried out by photographer James Andanson, who has since died, on the orders of the security services. During his evidence, Mr Al Fayed held up a copy of Monday's Sun newspaper, which claims Paul Burrell said he had not told the whole truth to the inquest. He said of Mr Burrell: "He's been sitting here in the witness box talking about baloney things. It's important to bring him back." Lord Justice Scott Baker later told the court: "This is something that's certainly being investigated." The coroner said he had called for the Sun's tape and would want to know the circumstances under which it was obtained. Richard Horwell QC for the Metropolitan Police Commissioner put it to Mr Al Fayed that he had denied Diana "dignity in death" by raising the question of her pregnancy. The barrister added that "witness after witness" had been asked about her method of contraception and her menstrual cycle, "and the evidence shows she could not have been pregnant". Mr Al Fayed replied: "All the witnesses who have been saying this are part of the cover-up and have been told what to say." The Harrods owner broke down when asked about the moment he was told Dodi was dead. He said someone from security told him, but when asked if he remembered a call from Ritz hotel president Frank Klein, he answered: "It's difficult. I'd like to know why you are asking me things like that." Mr Klein has told the inquest he telephoned Mr Al Fayed to break the news and he replied: "This is not an accident."PrintShare it! — Rate it: up down flag this hub



