Prince Harry reveals he once believed Princess Diana faked her death

Prince Harry reveals he once believed that Diana faked her own death by staging accident in Paris tunnel and ‘running away’ because her life was ‘miserable’

  • Prince Harry admits he questioned if his mother, Diana, faked her own death 
  • He writes about his reaction to the tragedy in his bombshell memoirs ‘Spare’
  • Then 13-year-old Duke learnt of Diana’s death in 1997 while staying at Balmoral 

Prince Harry once believed that his mother faked her own death by staging the tragic Paris tunnel car crash to escape her ‘miserable’ life.

The Duke of Sussex writes in his bombshell memoirs Spare that he also wanted the inquiry into the Princess of Wales’s fatal accident to be reopened.

Harry, then 13 and staying at Balmoral, learnt that his mother was killed in a car crash and admits he wondered if the incident had been a ‘trick’ played by his late mother. 

‘Her life’s been miserable, she’s been hounded, harassed, lied about, lied to. So she’s staged an accident as a diversion and run away,’ Harry wrote.  

Both he and his brother, Prince William were disappointed with the results of the Operation Paget inquiry and were ultimately ‘talked out of’ calling for a reinvestigation ‘by the powers that be’, he also claims.

Prince Harry’s once believed that Princess Diana faked her own death by staging the tragic Paris tunnel car crash to escape her ‘miserable’ life. Pictured: The pair above in Majorca, Spain in 1987

The Duke of Sussex writes in his bombshell memoirs Spare that he also wanted the inquiry into the Princess of Wales’s fatal accident to be reopened

Harry relives his memory of the days following his mother’s death and how he battled with himself to accept the truth of the situation. 

Despite being told what had happened, he recalled telling himself his mother was just ‘hiding’ and not really dead – a theory he revealed later in the book that he often returned to for his own comfort.

The Duke also recalled how he and William were forbidden from watching the TV so they could be shielded from news reports about Diana’s death.

The Operation Paget inquiry, led by ex-Metropolitan Police Commissioner Lord Stevens, ruled that the Princess died in a ‘tragic accident’ rather than by murder.

A two-year inquest that followed that inquiry found Diana and Dodi Fayed were unlawfully killed due to gross negligence by both drunk driver Henri Paul and pursuing paparazzi photographers.

Following the end of the inquest in 2008, the brothers released a joint statement saying that they agreed with the jury’s verdict and praised the manner in which they considered the evidence. 

Harry also recounts in the book how he asked a driver to replicate the fatal journey his mother took through the Pont de l’Alma tunnel where she was killed. 

While in the French capital for the 2007 Rugby World Cup semi-final, Harry, who was 23, demanded to be driven through the crash site at 65mph – the same speed and twice the limit for the road as the Mercedes carrying Diana and Dodi Fayed was travelling before it hit a pillar in August 1997. 

Harry said there was ‘no reason anyone should ever die inside’ the tunnel, adding the drive was ‘a very bad idea’.

Extracts from the Duke of Sussex’s memoirs, Spare, reveal Harry also sought out a psychic who ‘claimed to have powers’ to try and speak with Diana. 

He also claimed to have received a message from the late Princess of Wales, in which Harry was apparently told he was ‘living the life she couldn’t.’

In another passage, Harry wrote how he was told his mother’s ghost ‘witnessed’ how his son Archie has broken a Christmas tree ornament in the shape of the Queen.

Extracts from the Duke of Sussex’s memoirs, Spare, reveal Harry sought a woman who ‘claimed to have powers’ to try and speak with Diana, who was killed in a car crash in Paris in 1997 when her youngest son was about to turn 13

Diana and Charles leaving St Mary’s Hospital with newborn Harry in 1984

It was claimed that the psychic quizzed the Duke over the breaking of a Christmas ornament, who admitted his son was attempting to fix it.

The woman is then alleged to have said the late Princess enjoyed a giggle over the incident.

In his controversial tell-all book Spare, which was put on sale early in Spain ahead of publication next week, the Duke of Sussex lobbed a barrage of new ‘truth bombs’ at the Royal Family – including accusations that William assaulted him in a row over Meghan and claims that William and their father Charles confronted him after Prince Philip‘s funeral ‘looking for a fight’. 

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