- LONDON (Reuters) - An inquest
into the death of Britain's Princess Diana opens Tuesday, promising to
shed light on the car crash that killed her and possibly lay to rest conspiracy
theories that she was murdered.
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- The former wife of heir-to-the-throne Prince Charles
died alongside her lover Dodi Al Fayed and their chauffeur Henri Paul when
their speeding Mercedes car crashed in a Paris tunnel on Aug. 31, 1997,
as it was chased by paparazzi on motorbikes.
-
- Six years and 128 days after the accident, media and
public fascination with Diana, who was one of the world's most glamorous
and instantly recognizable figures, is still strong.
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- Reporters from across the globe will hear Royal Coroner
Michael Burgess open separate inquests Tuesday into the deaths of Diana
and Dodi -- the first official public hearings into the crash to be held
on British soil.
-
- "The coroner will read a statement outlining the
position now, what he will and won't look at, and why it has taken so long
to get to this stage," a spokeswoman for the coroner's office said.
-
- The inquest will then be adjourned and it will probably
be at least six months before a full hearing takes place as Burgess must
first wade through more than 6,000 pages of evidence, the spokeswoman added.
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- WAS DIANA PREGNANT?
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- An inquiry by French authorities in 1999 ruled the accident
was caused by chauffeur Paul being drunk and driving too fast.
-
- However, more sinister plots and theories abound.
-
- Dodi's father, Harrods store owner Mohammed Al Fayed,
has repeatedly called for a British inquiry, insisting that Diana and his
son were murdered by the British secret services.
-
- Diana's butler Paul Burrell said in a recent book she
had predicted her own death in a letter written 10 months before she died,
claiming someone was planning to kill her in a car crash.
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- And just last month a British newspaper reported that
an unnamed French police investigator had claimed that Diana was pregnant
at the time of her death.
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- Both Mohammed Al Fayed and Burrell could be called as
witnesses to the inquest, although this will not be decided until a later
date.
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- Robert Lacey, a royal biographer, said the inquests should
finally reveal all the facts and bring some closure to the events, although
he added the "magical aura" round Diana meant some people would
never believe her death was an accident.
-
- "I'm quite sure if someone had wished to kill Diana
and her lover they would have come up with a better scheme than bashing
her car off the wall in a Paris tunnel," Lacey told Reuters.
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