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JOHN LICHFIELD

OPINION: French police secrecy encouraged wild conspiracy theories on Princess Diana and Al-Hilli deaths

Veteran reporter John Lichfield reported on both the death of Princess Diana and Dodi Al-Fayed in Paris in 1997 and the Al-Hilli family in the French Alps in 2012 - he looks back at the media circus that surrounded both cases and how the French police policies encouraged the wild conspiracy theories that still rage to this day.

OPINION: French police secrecy encouraged wild conspiracy theories on Princess Diana and Al-Hilli deaths
Floral tributes to Princess Diana and Dodi Al-Fayed near the Pont de l'Alma in Paris. Photo by Patrick KOVARIK / AFP

Wednesday is the 25th anniversary of the road accident which killed Princess Diana and Dodi Al-Fayed in Paris. Next Monday is the 10th anniversary of the Al-Hilli murders in the French Alps.

What do these two events have in common, other than the proximity of their dates?

They are both – still – the object of wild conspiracy theories.

In both cases, if you look at the undisputed facts, the possibilities are limited. The Diana accident could only have been an accident. The Al-Hilli murders were almost certainly a random act by someone local.

Neither of these explanations is satisfactory to a chunk of the popular media – in France as well as in Britain. Wild notions still thrive.

I reported both events at the time. I have studied them in some detail. The sequence of events makes any form of assassination impossible (in the case of Diana and Dodi’s death) or extremely unlikely (in the case of the Al-Hilli murders).

In both cases, the French investigators have been criticised in the UK media. Is there any truth to the criticisms? A little; not much.

What is certainly true is that both events illustrated the huge gulf between the ways that French and Anglo-Saxon investigators deal with the media.

In theory, every party of a French criminal investigation is secret once it is handed over to an examining magistrate or juge d’instruction. In the case of the Diana accident in 1997,  the investigating magistrate, Hervé Stéphan, took that principle seriously. In the first couple of weeks, very little information, beyond the basic facts, was given to the world media assembled in Paris.

Together with a BBC colleague, Hugh Schofield, I  wrote to Judge Stéphan at the time. We said we understood the French system but unless he allowed the official findings to be released, a thousand conspiracy theories would breed.

He wrote back to say, in effect: “You are absolutely right but my hands are tied. Rules are rules.”

By the time of the Al-Hilli murders 15 years later, it seemed to me that that the French judicial authorities had learned their lessons from the information débacle in the Diana case. The Annecy chief prosecutor, Eric Maillaud, gave regular press conferences. Some of the leading gendarmerie investigators took part.

Even so, the information was limited and strangely filtered. It took a big leak to Le Monde in November (two months after the event) to establish the basic time-line of what happened in a forest lay-by near the village of Chevaline on September 5th, 2012.

Once again, the absence of fundamental information allowed wild theories to take hold.

Take the accident in Paris first. There are some areas of uncertainty. A white Fiat which struck Diana and Dodi’s limousine has never been traced. But the undisputed facts make it impossible for anyone to have organised an assassination attempt and disguised it as an accident.

The route taken by Diana and Dodi that night was random. They were trying to shake off the paparazzi on motorbikes who were pursuing them from the Ritz Hotel. Rather than go straight back to Dodi’s flat just off the Champs Elysées, they took a large detour along the fast quais beside the river Seine.

Their driver was the worse for both drink and drugs. He was actually heading away from Dodi’s flat when he crashed into a pillar in the tunnel below the Place de L’Alma.

How could anyone – M16, CIA or the Royal Family – have known that their limo would have been in that place at that time?

Now, the Al-Hilli murders.

All sorts of intriguing or suspicious-sounding information has been unearthed by the media about the three victims: Saad Al-Hilli, 50, his wife Iqbal, 47, and her mother Suhaila Al-Alaf, 74. Similar theories have been advanced to suggest that the real target of the murders was Sylvain Mollier, 46, the local cyclist found dead beside the British-Iraqi family’s car.

Both the Al-Hillis and Mollier took random decisions that day to drive or cycle to the end of a winding, bumpy 3 kilometre road into the forests and mountains above Lake Annecy.

Witnesses saw no sign that they were followed. It is difficult to imagine how a murderer – contract killer in the case of the Al-Hillis; someone with a personal grudge in the case of Mollier – could have been lying in wait for them at that isolated place at 3.30pm that afternoon.

The forensic evidence found at the scene suggests that killer was there when they arrived. It also identifies the gun used as a 70 years old (at least) 7.65 mm P06 Luger, issued to the Swiss army and police until the end of the 1930s. That is scarcely the weapon of choice for a contract killer.

After dutifully following all possible leads about Saad Al-Hilli’s business activities as a microsatellite  engineer and his quarrel with his brother about their father’s will, French investigators long ago reached a working conclusion. The murders were a random act by a deranged local man, who has since died or is still lying low.

Conclusion: the French policy of “secrecy of the investigation” encourages wild interpretations, and pure invention, to prosper. Twenty five and ten years later, the collective, popular memory – especially of the Princess Diana road accident – retains the wild theories. It is often hazy on the facts.

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JOHN LICHFIELD

OPINION: Plan for Paris Olympics opening ceremony on the Seine was too ambitious

The idea of holding the Olympics opening ceremony on the River Seine is a 'crazy idea' - maybe it would have been best to have left it at the ideas stage, writes John Lichfield.

OPINION: Plan for Paris Olympics opening ceremony on the Seine was too ambitious

In 100 days the most ambitious, spectacular and telegenic opening ceremony in the history of the Olympic Games will take place on the River Seine in Paris.

There will be 94 barges with actors, dancers and 10,000 athletes from almost every country in the world.

Or maybe not.

On Monday, President Emmanuel Macron conceded what has been obvious for some time. Such a ceremony, with 320,000 spectators occupying both banks for six kilometres from Austerlitz to Trocadero, will be a logistical and security nightmare.

France is involved, tangentially and directly, in two wars. Its terrorism alert is already at its highest possible level. Whatever happens in Ukraine and Gaza in the next three months, the Paris Olympics and Paralympics from July 26th will be a tempting target for Islamist extremists and for the criminals in the Kremlin.

In an interview with BFMTV, President Macron said that the government and the Games organisers were working on possible Plans B and C. If the terrorism threat is judged to be unacceptably high this summer, the floating parade of dancers, singers and national teams will be abandoned.

The alternatives will be b) a much smaller river ceremony between Trocadero and the Eiffel Tower or c) a banal stadium event at the Stade de France.

Macron insisted that, if at all feasible, the river jamboree will go ahead. “We want the ceremony to as beautiful as it can be,” he said. “We want to show the very best of France.”

Fair enough. Not everyone cares for the Olympics as a sporting event.

Who is favourite to win the synchronised swimming this year? Or the poodle clipping? (Sorry, that was in the 1900 Paris Olympics but has never been revived.)

The opening ceremony is a chance for the host country to dazzle and to impress. It is the one part of the 2012 London Olympics that most people remember.

The French organisers decided that the star of the Paris Olympics should be Paris. The back-drop of the opening ceremony would not be models of Notre-Dame, or the Louvre, or the Eiffel Tower. It would be the real thing.

A couple of swimming events will (sewage permitting) will take place in the river Seine. Some events, such as fencing and taekwondo, will be fought out under the enormous, glass roof of the newly restored Grand Palais on the Champs Elysées.

Terrorism or no terrorism, bringing the Games into the heart of one of the densest cities in the world has proved to be problematic.

The swimming events in the Seine will have to be transferred if the river falls below the standards laid down by the 2006 European Union bathing directive. As of last summer, all 14 testing points within the city boundaries exceeded the maximum permitted limit for concentrations of E.coli.

READ ALSO Will the Seine really be clean enough to swim in?

New sewage pipes and treatment works are under construction. President Macron and the mayor of Paris, Anne Hidalgo, have promised to show the way by jumping into the river this summer.

There was a huge row last year when it was announced that the second-hand book sellers, Les Bouquinistes, would be made to remove the book stalls which have been fixed to the walls of the Seine embankments for almost four centuries.

That officious plan was abandoned. There is still, however, an unresolved dispute over attempts to tow away Seine house-boats to make room for the Olympic procession.

Residents of a large swathe of central Paris, from the Arc de Triomphe in the west to the suburban town of Evry in the east learned last week that, for a week in late July, they will need a QR code to walk in the street near their homes. The same will apply to the tourists. They will need a QR code to visit the Champs Elysées or the Arc de Triomphe and the Seine quays.

Factcheck: Which areas in Paris will be closed during the Olympics

These clumsy and tyrannical rules will apply for a week before the opening ceremony on the river on July 26th. The code is available on application on-line to the Securité Internationale et Lutte Contre le Terrorisme (SILT) system which will be set up by the Ministry of the Interior. Anyone suspected of being a security threat will be refused.

Originally, it was promised that converting the Seine into an amphitheatre would allow up to two million people -equivalent to the whole population of the city – to watch the ceremony for free. The possible attendance was then reduced to 500,000; and now 222,000.

Don’t fancy queuing for a free spot? Don’t worry. Another 100,000 people will be accommodated on the lower Seine quays – for €1,600 to €2,500 a seat.

The waterborne opening ceremony was dreamed up by a canoeist, Tony Estanguet, a three-time Olympic gold-medal winner, who is now president of the Paris 2024 organising committee. It was ultimately the choice of another President – Emmanuel Macron.

He said in 2021: “When Tony first brought me the idea, I said, ‘that’s crazy. Lets do it.”

Now fast forward three years. The whole thing might be a calamity; it could be a spectacular success; it might not happen at all; any last minute substitute would seem lame.

It was a great thought, Tony and Emmanuel. But maybe, on balance, it was not a very good idea.

If you’re coming to Paris for the Olympics or Paralympics, you can get The Local’s Paris Olympic Guides newsletter, giving you all the latest practical information for your visit – sign up here.

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