Princess Diana letter: 'Charles plans to kill me'

LONDON A handwritten letter in which Diana, Princess of Wales claimed that the Prince of Wales was plotting to kill her so he could marry Tiggy Legge-Bourke, the former nanny to Princes William and Harry, has been shown at the inquest into her death.

Princess Diana's chauffeur was drunk and "staggering like a clown" just hours before the high-speed crash that killed her and her lover Dodi al-Fayed, the inquest into their deaths was told on Thursday.

Alain Willaumez, barman at the Ritz Hotel in Paris, said of chauffeur Henri Paul: "I saw him drunk."

He said Paul bumped into a colleague when walking out of the bar. "He was walking like a clown," he said by videolink from Paris.

Diana and Dodi were killed in August 1997 when their chauffeur-driven limousine crashed in a Paris road tunnel while being pursued by paparazzi.

Richard Kay, one of Diana's closest journalist confidants, told the inquest that the princess was planning to quit Britain.

She also intended to wind down her campaign to abolish landmines and concentrate on setting up an international network of hospices, the Daily Mail's former royal correspondent said.

She wrote: "I 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.

"This particular phase in my life is the most dangerous - my husband is planning 'an accident' in my car, brake failure and serious head injury in order to make the path clear for him to marry Tiggy. Camilla is nothing but a decoy, so we are all being used by the man in every sense of the word."

The letter has been shown at the inquest at the Royal Courts of Justice in London to witnesses who have been challenged over their assertions that the princess did not fear for her safety.

Kay, who spoke to Diana for the last time just hours before she was killed, was asked if she wanted to leave Britain.

Kay said she told him "My destiny is to go abroad." 
The world's most photographed woman said she was keen to escape being relentlessly pursued by paparazzi.

But she had rejected suggestions that she wanted to set up home in the Villa Windsor in Paris, the former home of the Duke and Duchess of Windsor after the former king had abdicated to marry the American divorcee.

"She used a phrase -- something like it was full of old ghosts. To her it was a museum, not a home."

Kay said he had come to the conclusion over the past decade that Diana's affair with Dodi al-Fayed would not have lasted.

"It is more likely that they would not have married and that the relationship would have run its course," he said.

Dodi's father Mohamed al-Fayed, owner of Harrods, says Diana and his son were killed by British security services on the orders of Prince Philip.

Fayed alleges the killing was ordered because the royal family did not want the mother of the future king having a child with his son. He says Diana's body was embalmed to cover up evidence she was expecting a baby.

Diana had visited Bosnia and Angola to publicise a campaign against landmines. Kay said he believed she wanted to visit southeast Asia and then wind down her involvement.

"Having done that, she felt she would have been to the most significant landmine zones of the world and she could have drawn a line under that aspect of her life," he said.
Her charity concerns would then have switched direction.

"She told me that she had been discussing with Mr al-Fayed senior the possibility of setting up some form of worldwide hospice network which he, she indicated, was prepared to financially underwrite."

During questioning on Tuesday, the letter was shown to Lucia Flecha da Lima, the wife of the former Brazilian ambassador to London and one of the princess's closest confidantes. She said that the princess had never expressed fears for her safety.

"I still don't believe in it," she said. "Paul Burrell was perfectly capable of imitating Princess Diana's handwriting. I don't believe she was fearing for her life, especially from Prince Charles, the future king of your country."

The inquest has already been told that in October 1995 the princess told Lord Mishcon, her solicitor, that "reliable sources" had informed her of the prince's plans "that she and Camilla would be put aside".


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