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Shamed BBC journalist apologizes over Diana interview

Martin Bashir, the BBC journalist who tricked Princess Diana into giving an explosive interview on Sunday apologized to Prince William and Harry but said claims linking his actions to her death were “unreasonable”.

A report by retired senior judge John Dyson published on Thursday found that Bashir commissioned faked bank statements that falsely suggested some of Diana’s closest aides were being paid by the security services to keep tabs on her.

Bashir, 58, then showed them to Diana’s brother Charles Spenser in a successful bid to convince him to arrange a meeting between himself and Diana and earn her trust.

Bashir told the Sunday Times he was, “deeply sorry” to Diana’s sons, Prince William and Prince Harry. “I never wanted to harm Diana in any way and i don’t believe we did”, he told the paper.

But William said Bashir’s actions and the interview had made “a major contribution” to the demise of his parents’ relationship and “contributed significantly to her fear, paranoia and isolation” in her final years.

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In his own release, Harry said that the deceptive practices had played a part in his mother’s death. “The ripple effect of a culture of exploitation and unethical practices ultimately took her life”, he said. Diana died in a Paris car crash in 1997, aged 36.

Bashir disputed the accusations saying, “I don’t think i can be held responsible for many of the other things that were going on in her life and the complex issues surrounding those decisions.

He argued that the 1995 interview had been conducted on Diana’s terms and that they remained firm friends after it aired to an audience of 22.8 million people.

 

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