Former bodyguard Trevor Rees, sole survivor of the Paris car
crash that
killed Princess Diana, denied on Wednesday being part of a murder cover-up.
The soft-spoken Rees, still bearing scars from the crash that killed Diana, her lover Dodi
al-Fayed and driver Henri Paul, said: “I am not part of any conspiracy to suppress the
truth.”
Lawyer Ian Burnett, outlining accusations made by Dodi’s father, wealthy businessman Mohamed Al Fayed,
told Rees he was accused of being part of a conspiracy to “suppress the truth” that they had been killed by British security services.
“All I have ever done is give the truth as I see it,” Rees told the inquest into the deaths of Diana and Dodi.
Mohamed al-Fayed alleges that his son and Diana were killed by British agents on the orders of Prince Philip, Queen Elizabeth’s husband and Diana’s former father-in-law.
Fayed believes her killing was ordered because the royal family did not want the mother of the future king having a child with his son. He alleges that Diana’s body was embalmed to cover up evidence she was expecting a baby.
Rees, who suffered horrific facial injuries in the high-speed crash, told the court his last memory was of leaving the backdoor of the Ritz hotel, owned by al-Fayed, on the fatal night in August 1997.
Since then, he had two flashbacks - one of paparazzi on a motorbike drawing up beside the car and another of a woman’s voice, presumably Diana, after the crash saying the name “Dodi”.
“I remember having heard someone moaning and the name Dodi was uttered,” the former paratrooper told the court.
But even he admitted “These memories are vague and sometimes I myself doubt them.”
Rees, who along with Paul was employed at the time by Al Fayed, told the inquest he had expressed doubts about Dodi’s doomed plan to leave the Ritz by a back entrance without any security to try and avoid paparazzi swarming around the front.
“The
decision to leave from the rear of the hotel, I believe came from Dodi. The decision to leave with no security would have been Dodi’s. However, my decision was to travel with the couple,” he said of the move that almost cost him his life.
Rees dismissed claims that Dodi and Diana had picked out an engagement ring in Monte Carlo the week before they died.
Asked if that had happened, Rees said “No, it did not.”
The rest of the morning was spent by Rees in the witness box meticulously reviewing CCTV images from the last night at the Ritz. Lawyer Ian Burnett hoped-but in vain-that it would jog his memory into new revelations.
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