Diana Verdict 戴安娜案判决
[audio]http://www.24en.com/bbc/dl_mp3/2008042112134089278.mp3[/audio][color=#3f3f3f][font=Verdana, 宋体, helvetica, arial, sans-serif][size=12px][p=21, 2, left]Was Princess Diana [b]murdered[/b]?[/p][p=21, 2, left]The [b]verdict[/b] is no, according to an[b]inquest[/b] held into the [b]cause[/b] [b]of her death[/b] over the last six months.[/p][p=21, 2, left]The big question was whether the deaths of Diana and her boyfriend Dodi Al Fayed in a [b]fatal car crash[/b] in 1997 had been [b]accidental[/b], or whether there was some kind of [b]conspiracy[/b] to have them killed.[/p][p=21, 2, left]Dodi’s father Mohamed Al Fayed, owner of London’s world-famous department store Harrods, has insisted for the last decade that the pair were [b]assassinated[/b] by [b]agents[/b] of the British state who did not want them to marry.[/p][p=21, 2, left]But his theories now look to have been [b]blown out of the water[/b]. The court found that Princess Diana and her boyfriend were not murdered but[b]unlawfully killed[/b] due to the "[b]gross negligence[/b]" of her driver and the[b]paparazzi[/b]. Her driver was drunk at the time of the crash and the paparazzi had been chasing their car.[/p][p=21, 2, left]So is this the end of the Diana story?[/p][p=21, 2, left]British [b]taxpayers[/b] may hope so. The inquest has cost them an [b]estimated[/b]£10m (140m RMB). "[b]Thank God it’s over[/b]", was the headline in The Guardian newspaper. UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown said it was time to "[b]draw a line[/b]" under the death of the Princess.[/p][p=21, 2, left]But Mohamed Al Fayed has refused to accept the verdict. He says the result will come as a "[b]blow[/b]" to millions of his supporters around the world, and has not [b]ruled out[/b] launching another investigation.[/p][p=21, 2, left]Whatever happens next, the special place Princess Diana has in the hearts of people around the world is not likely to be forgotten.[/p][/size][/font][/color]
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