Fayed takes Diana court fight to France
Fayed takes Diana court fight to France
Mohammed al Fayed seeks French legal action against British police for withholding proof of Princess Diana’s death.

Paris: Harrods owner Mohammed al Fayed on Tuesday said he is seeking French legal action against two British police officials he accuses of withholding evidence from the French inquiry into Princess Diana's death.

In a statement, al Fayed, whose son Dodi Fayed was also killed in the 1997 Paris car crash, said Diana's claims of a conspiracy to kill her should have been included in the British evidence.

French lawyers for Mohammed al Fayed have filed complaints with the Paris District Court against Lord Condon, former commissioner of Britain's Metropolitan Police, and Sir David Veness, former assistant commissioner.

The statement said an investigating judge would likely be appointed to the

case within three weeks.

Condon and Veness learned in October 1997, two months after the crash, that Diana had told her lawyers in 1995 of a possible conspiracy to kill or seriously injure her in a road accident.

Al Fayed has long held that the couple was victims of a plot. In December, a sweeping British police investigation ruled out a murder conspiracy.

Lord Condon has said he cooperated fully with the French investigation.

French Judge Herve Stephan published a report in 1999 saying driver Henri Paul was under the influence of drugs and alcohol at the time of the crash.

The photographers who were chasing the couple's car were cleared of French manslaughter charges. The British inquest into the couple's deaths will

begin in October.

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