This article is from the source 'bbc' and was first published or seen on . It will not be checked again for changes.
You can find the current article at its original source at http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/-/1/hi/uk/7188672.stm
The article has changed 8 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Version 3 | Version 4 |
---|---|
Diana 'said Queen would abdicate' | Diana 'said Queen would abdicate' |
(about 1 hour later) | |
Princess Diana claimed the Queen would abdicate in April 1996, her former lawyer has told her inquest. | Princess Diana claimed the Queen would abdicate in April 1996, her former lawyer has told her inquest. |
Maggie Rae said Diana stated to her lawyers in October 1995 that the Queen would stand aside for Prince Charles. | Maggie Rae said Diana stated to her lawyers in October 1995 that the Queen would stand aside for Prince Charles. |
The princess also said there were plans to sideline her through an accident where she would be seriously injured, Ms Rae told the hearing. | The princess also said there were plans to sideline her through an accident where she would be seriously injured, Ms Rae told the hearing. |
Diana's ex-butler Paul Burrell returned to the inquest for a second day after being sent home to retrieve documents. | |
The princess and Mr Al Fayed died after a car crash in a Paris road tunnel in 1997. | The princess and Mr Al Fayed died after a car crash in a Paris road tunnel in 1997. |
Royal succession | Royal succession |
Princess Diana's claims came at a meeting with her legal team at Kensington Palace, said Ms Rae. | Princess Diana's claims came at a meeting with her legal team at Kensington Palace, said Ms Rae. |
And, on the idea that any member of the royal family was behind a plot to kill Diana - not true, according to Mr Burrell The BBC's Daniela Relph What the butler saw | |
Diana also told the lawyers that she felt the succession should skip a generation and that her son, Prince William, should be made king. | Diana also told the lawyers that she felt the succession should skip a generation and that her son, Prince William, should be made king. |
Her leading lawyer, the late Lord Mishcon, was so surprised by what she said at the meeting that he made a note of it and kept it securely until after her death. | Her leading lawyer, the late Lord Mishcon, was so surprised by what she said at the meeting that he made a note of it and kept it securely until after her death. |
In the note, Lord Mishcon said he was alarmed and asked the princess's private secretary Patrick Jephson whether any of it could be true. | In the note, Lord Mishcon said he was alarmed and asked the princess's private secretary Patrick Jephson whether any of it could be true. |
Mr Jephson said he did half-believe some of it. | Mr Jephson said he did half-believe some of it. |
Butler's evidence | |
Mr Burrell was ordered to "hot foot" it from London by the coroner to his home in Farndon, Cheshire, to retrieve the documents which he said he needed. | |
But upon returning from the 382-mile round trip to state that the letter was not there, and possibly was in America. | |
In a note to the coroner, Lord Justice Scott Baker, he disclosed what the "secret" had been. | |
But the coroner told him in open court: "(There is) not in fact one secret but two secrets and you describe them to me in the letter. | |
"But having examined the matter it doesn't seem to me that they are secrets at all. | |
"Both pieces of information are fairly and squarely in the public domain in way or another, one of them indeed appears in your book The Way We Were." | |
Michael Mansfield, representing Mohamed al Fayed, told the former butler: "What you are suggesting in the letter (to the coroner) today, it's more than one secret. | |
"She's going to live almost entirely abroad, by which you seem to be suggesting that was the United States of America. | |
"But on the other hand there's a second secret, which is not the United States of America - it's South Africa." | |
Microwaving meals | Microwaving meals |
During her evidence, Ms Rae said she had been surprised by the princess' claims and did not really believe that any of them could be backed up. | |
She said she had been taken aback by her meeting and talked at the inquest of Diana being in lonely, silent apartments at Kensington Palace. | |
She said she had spoken to Diana one weekend when the princess had been alone all the time and microwaving her own meals. | |
Ms Rae and fellow solicitor Sandra Davis told the hearing that Diana often expressed fears that she would be killed. | Ms Rae and fellow solicitor Sandra Davis told the hearing that Diana often expressed fears that she would be killed. |
Ms Davis said the princess had been "deadly serious" about her concerns at the meeting in October 1995, and those present informed the police. | Ms Davis said the princess had been "deadly serious" about her concerns at the meeting in October 1995, and those present informed the police. |
'Big machine' | 'Big machine' |
Diana also thought both she and Camilla Parker Bowles, now the Duchess of Cornwall, were to be "put aside" in favour of royal nanny Tiggy Legge-Bourke. | Diana also thought both she and Camilla Parker Bowles, now the Duchess of Cornwall, were to be "put aside" in favour of royal nanny Tiggy Legge-Bourke. |
Michael Mansfield, representing Dodi Al Fayed's father Mohamed Al Fayed, read an extract in court from the diaries of Tony Blair's former communications chief Alastair Campbell. | Michael Mansfield, representing Dodi Al Fayed's father Mohamed Al Fayed, read an extract in court from the diaries of Tony Blair's former communications chief Alastair Campbell. |
Writing about a dinner party at Ms Rae's home in 1997, Mr Campbell wrote of Diana: "Tony Blair couldn't work out whether to flirt with her or treat her like a visiting dignitary, he ended up doing a bit of both but wasn't comfortable." | Writing about a dinner party at Ms Rae's home in 1997, Mr Campbell wrote of Diana: "Tony Blair couldn't work out whether to flirt with her or treat her like a visiting dignitary, he ended up doing a bit of both but wasn't comfortable." |
The lawyer said she had taken care of some of Diana's correspondence, including a letter from the Queen which said the princess and Prince Charles needed to get divorced. | The lawyer said she had taken care of some of Diana's correspondence, including a letter from the Queen which said the princess and Prince Charles needed to get divorced. |
The letters were returned to Diana shortly before her divorce. | The letters were returned to Diana shortly before her divorce. |
Speaking about Diana's fears, Mr Mansfield asked Ms Rae: "It may be that underneath it all people were just not listening or taking her seriously. Is that a possibility to you?" | Speaking about Diana's fears, Mr Mansfield asked Ms Rae: "It may be that underneath it all people were just not listening or taking her seriously. Is that a possibility to you?" |
"Yes," she replied. | "Yes," she replied. |