Princess Diana's Death:
Conspiracy Theories - CoverUps.com
The Queen did it. Or maybe it was M.I.6, the
British secret service. The motive: to prevent Princess Diana
from marrying Dodi Fayed, bearing his child---step sibling to
a future king--- and becoming a Muslim. Or maybe the motive was
to protect the new world order from an activist princess with
inconvenient ideas, such as banning land mines. How did the killers
do it? Small bombs placed on the front and roof of the Mercedes
in which she and Dodi rode. Or maybe the Mercedes was sabotaged
with a remote-control device that locked the wheels and steering
column at the flick of a switch in some far-off location---say,
Balmoral. Some anti-Royals believe the queen pushed the button
herself.
Like most conspiracy theories, the scenarios
spun since Diana's death lead everywhere and nowhere. Many of
the juiciest theories circulate on the Internet, where postings
about Diana are rapidly becoming as numerous as those about the
deaths of JFK, Marilyn Monroe and the king of the after world,
Elvis Presley. But it is Egypt, homeland of the Fayeds, that
has become the center of a booming conspiracy-theory industry.
Already at least half-a-dozen books about the dead
princess are on sale in Cairo. One called "Who Killed Diana?!"
was written in three days and is selling briskly enough, at $1.47
a copy, to warrant a second edition, out this week. Author Mohamed
Ragab maintains that Britain's royal family and "Jewish circles"
ordered the deaths to keep Diana from marrying Dodi. In the daily
Al Ahram, Anis Mansour, a former adviser to Anwar Sadat, said Diana
was "killed by British Intelligence to save the monarchy."
A well-known Egyptian film director, Khairy Beshara, is writing
the script for a movie about Diana's life. He has some reservations
about the conspiracy theories, but he says she "suffered from
cruel traditions" imposed on her by her in-laws.
Egyptians jumped to ugly conclusions about
Diana's death partly because of a deeply ingrained feeling that
the British, who ruled them until 1952, regard them as inferior.
Egyptians say "a Dodi cannot marry the Princess of Wales,
and the British would go as far as having them killed,"
says newspaper columnist Mohamed Sid Ahmed. "Conspiracy
theories are a stock in trade here," says Tim Sullivan,
a political science professor at American University in Cairo.
He traces the cause to a sense of powerlessness. "When you
think you don't have control over your life and over events,"
he says, "then conspiracy theories explain what is happening."
The First Diana Conspiracy Site popped up
on Internet in Australia only hours after the death was announced.
"The whole thing seems too pat and too convenient,"
it said, putting blame for the crash on Western governments,
arms manufacturers and the royal family. One reporter heard the
theory about the remote-control device in Paris, London, Los
Angeles, and Milan, where a bodyguard claimed that the Mercedes
S-280, the model used by Diana, often figures in murderous "accidents."
In Los Angeles, Leslie Barry, 35, voices another
widely held theory. "I'm sure the royals did a blood test
on her body and found out she was pregnant," Barry says.
"They'll probably now use this to blackmail Diana's family,
especially if her brother tries to have more contact with the
boys." Other people think the crash was aimed at killing
Dodi, not Diana. "I heard he stiffed some people in his
business here," says a well heeled Beverly Hills resident.
Then there are the true believers who think
Diana is still alive. Subscribers to this theory, say she was
fed up with the intrusions on her private life and used the resources
of the Fayed family to fake her death. One message on the London
Net Web site says Diana and Dodi are living on "a small
tropical island near the Middle East," communicating with
her sons by "satellite video conferencing."
While no solid evidence exists, conspiracy theories
about the death of Princess Diana continue to grow and flourish. To
many it doesn't seem fitting, or even reasonable, that somebody as special
and unique as Diana should die in something as common as an automobile
accident. Perhaps they are right.
Princess Di Overview * Conspiracy Theories * That Night - After The Crash
Photos * The
French Connection * OUR
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