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Harry asked driver to replicate journey Diana took in Paris before her death

In 2007,he was driven through the Pont de l’Alma tunnel at the same speed as the car that was carrying his mother and Dodi Fayed before it crashed.

Ted Hennessey
Thursday 05 January 2023 14:55 EST
Harry was driven in the tunnel in 2007 (Chris Radburn/PA)
Harry was driven in the tunnel in 2007 (Chris Radburn/PA) (PA Archive)

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The Duke of Sussex said he asked a driver to replicate the journey his mother Diana, Princess of Wales took in the lead-up to her death.

While in Paris for the 2007 Rugby World Cup semi-final, Harry, who was 23, was driven through the Pont de l’Alma tunnel at the same speed as the car that was carrying Diana and Dodi Fayed before it crashed in August 1997.

Harry said in his autobiography Spare there was “no reason anyone should ever die inside” the tunnel, adding the drive was “a very bad idea”.

According to People magazine, he writes: “Off we went, weaving through traffic, cruising past the Ritz, where Mummy had her last meal, with her boyfriend, that August night. Then we came to the mouth of the tunnel. We zipped ahead, went over the lip at the tunnel’s entrance, the bump that supposedly sent Mummy’s Mercedes veering off course.

“But the lip was nothing. We barely felt it.

“As the car entered the tunnel I leaned forward, watched the light change to a kind of water orange, watched the concrete pillars flicker past. I counted them, counted my heartbeats, and in a few seconds we emerged from the other side.

“I sat back. Quietly I said: Is that all of it? It’s… nothing. Just a straight tunnel.

“I’d always imagined the tunnel as some treacherous passageway, inherently dangerous, but it was just a short, simple, no-frills tunnel. No reason anyone should ever die inside it.”

The inquest into Diana’s death heard that her car was travelling at between 60mph and 65mph – around twice the 31mph (50kph) limit for the road – when it struck the 13th pillar of the westbound carriageway in the underpass.

Harry says in his autobiography he thought the drive would “bring an end, or brief cessation” to a “decade of unrelenting pain”.

He adds: “It had been a very bad idea. I’d had plenty of bad ideas in my 23 years, but this one was uniquely ill-conceived.

“I’d told myself that I wanted closure, but I didn’t really.”

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