Sunday, May 27, 2012

Chloe Papazahariakis : Key Witness Claims There Was A Conspiracy To Kill Diana.

http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=bc4_1282076557

http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=b14_1305452700


Never seen before: The picture was taken by society photographer Lord Snowdon, and shows Princess Diana posing with her two young sons
Never seen before: The picture was taken by society photographer Lord Snowdon, and shows Princess Diana posing with her two young sons

Charles Harbord :Suicide - Harbord was the father of socialite Astrid, who became especially close to Harry in 2009 after he split from girlfriend Chelsy Davy.

Prince Harry was said to be in shock last night after the father of one of his closest friends  committed suicide.
Charles Harbord, who shot himself at his family home, was the father of socialite Astrid, who became especially close to Harry in 2009 after he split from girlfriend Chelsy Davy.
It is thought the Harrow-educated aristocrat had been depressed since financial problems forced him to sell the family home 18 months ago and move into a rented apartment.
Hidden anguish: Charles Harbord appeared in good spirits at Ascot last year with his daughters Astrid, left, and Davina
Hidden anguish: Charles Harbord appeared in good spirits at Ascot last year with his daughters Astrid, left, and Davina
His daughter Astrid is a member of Harry’s inner social circle and one of a handful of close friends  who attended the Duchess of Cambridge’s low-key hen party last year.

 

Speaking outside Wyke Hall, near Gillingham, Dorset, where her father’s body was found with fatal gunshot wounds on Tuesday, Astrid said it was too early to speak openly about the family’s loss.
She told The Mail on Sunday: ‘We’re not quite ready to talk publicly about him yet. All I will say is that he was an amazing father. To everyone who knew him he was a legend.’
A friend of the family said: ‘Prince Harry is bound to be devastated and very concerned. I’m sure he will have been in touch. He’s close to Astrid and her sister Davina.’
Night owls: Prince Harry leaves a nightclub with Astrid in 2009
Night owls: Prince Harry leaves a nightclub with Astrid in 2009
Police are still investigating the exact circumstances of Mr Harbord’s death, but neighbours were in shock. One said: ‘The police came around and were asking questions of the closest neighbours.
‘When I heard it was Charles, I refused to believe it. He was an absolutely lovely man.
‘The family have only been here about 18 months and they are very private people. But they are well-liked and friendly.’
A friend of Mr Harbord’s said it was widely assumed the family had encountered financial difficulties.
‘I think, like so many people, they have been hit by the state of the economy,’ he said.
‘Charles was a charming man and a genuine character, the kind of Englishman you don’t often meet these days. He was very well connected in the art and motoring worlds. Apart from his family, they were his two main passions.’
The 68-year-old, who was married to second wife Sarah-Juliet, ran  a newsletter for historic motor enthusiasts called Cars For The Connoisseur.
The publication was founded in 2001 ‘to record the memories and reminiscences of characters from the world of motoring’.  Its website states that its outlook is ‘unashamedly nostalgic’.
Mr Harbord leaves two daughters, Astrid, 30, who runs her own PR company, and 26-year-old Davina. Together they were nicknamed ‘The Hardcore Sisters’ for their love of partying with the Royal set.
A source close to the Harbord  family added: ‘It is just so shocking what has happened. I think Charles was very depressed, and it was because of money troubles.’
In 2010, the family sold their £760,000 home in Wiltshire to move into one of the ten apartments within Wyke Hall, a converted, Grade II listed manor house, parts of which date back more than 500 years.
‘It’s like a country house divided into lots of smaller houses,’ said one source. ‘They are often described  as a millionaire family, but they were far from millionaires.
Royal circles: Astrid Harbord shares a laugh with Kate Middleton at a charity boxing event
Royal circles: Astrid Harbord shares a laugh with Kate Middleton at a charity boxing event

‘They weren’t on the dole but I don’t think there was much money coming in.’
At their former home near Salisbury, neighbours remembered Mr Harbord as an intensely private man. ‘Charles could be a bit pre-occupied – he wouldn’t always say hello if he passed you in the street,’ said one.
‘He ran his car magazine from an office in the house and you would often see the light on there deep into the night.
‘We got talking to him and Sarah-Juliet at the local Dinton jazz festival. He was a huge jazz fan. I think he played several instruments himself.’
His daughters enjoyed a more lively social life with the young  Royals. In March 2009, history graduate Astrid was seen going back to Clarence House with Prince Harry at 3am following a night on the town. Their chauffeur-driven car entered the Palace by a back gate reserved for members of the Royal Family.
A month later it emerged that Harry had attended an illegal rave – or ‘Raav’ as it was called by its affluent attendees – with the Harbord sisters and 400 other revellers in a repossessed office block in Whitechapel, East London. The Prince left the ‘Dress2Sweat’ event at 1.30am with Miss Harbord.
His decision to attend the party in an area known for a high crime rate later raised questions about his judgment and safety.
Soon afterwards, Astrid, dubbed the ‘coolest blonde to leave Bristol [university] since Jemima Khan’ by society magazine Tatler, embarked on two-year relationship with  banking heir James Rothschild. She was said to be devastated when they broke up in September 2011.
Scene of the tragedy: Charles Harbord's body was found in Wyke Hall, where the family lived since downsizing to a rented apartment in 2010
Scene of the tragedy: Charles Harbord's body was found in Wyke Hall, where the family lived since downsizing to a rented apartment in 2010
James is the son of Amschel Rothschild, who in a tragic coincidence, committed suicide in Paris hotel room in July 1996, aged 41.
Astrid’s younger sister Davina, a property agent who was educated  at £26,700-a-year Tudor Hall school near Banbury, Oxfordshire, is believed to be dating Julian Rufus Isaacs, Viscount Erleigh. The city banker, who introduced Prince Harry to Miss Davy, is the son of Simon Isaacs, 4th Marquess  of Reading, a lifelong friend of  Prince Charles.
The Harbords, who are listed in society bible Burke’s Peerage, boast an impeccable lineage. They are descended from landowner and Norwich MP, Harbord Harbord, who was made Baron Suffield by Prime Minister William Pitt in 1786.
Last night a Dorset police spokeswoman said of Mr Harbord’s death: ‘There are no suspicious circumstances and the coroner is now dealing with this. An inquest was opened and adjourned on May 24 at the  Coroner’s Court in Dorchester.’


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2150459/Charles-Harbord-suicide-Prince-Harry-shock-close-friend-Astrids-father-dies.html#ixzz1w4ILwjWi

Thursday, May 24, 2012

Lady DIE : Full Documentary.





http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s2dSXEZp9io&sns=tw

Uploaded by on 10 Sep 2011

A Message From British Film Director, CHRIS EVERARD:
Since 1997, I have been investigating the crash which killed Princess Diana, her companion, Dodi AlFayed, the driver, Henri Paul, and massively wounded ex-paratrooper Trevor Rees-Jones. LADY DIE represents nearly ten years of research by myself, DAVID ICKE and the co-authors of the book "Diana: The Hidden Evidence", JON KING and JOHN BEVERIDGE.

A Mercedes S280 of the exact model and year was purchased in order that tests could be made for this documentary. The film has a running time of nearly 4 hours and leaves no stone unturned.

The horrific history of the royal family is exposed, including the faked suicide/murder of Stephen Ward, Prince Philip's links with the Profumo scandal, Occult Cocktail Parties at the Cliveden Estate in the 1960s, the exorcism of Stephen Wards cottage, the double murder of two young princes in the Tower of London, the forced euthenasia of King George in 1936 - his killing was timed to coincide with the morning edition of The Times newspaper - and, of course, the film features a full investigation into the crash which killed Princess Diana.

I assembled a Scotland Yard-style incident board for the making of this documentary, which reveals hitherto unknown information about many of the characters involved in the plot to kill Diana.

The film explores the hand-written note which Diana gave to her butler - and another given for safe keeping to her lawyer - which explicitly said that a fake car crash, one which would result in death, was being planned by people working for Prince Charles.

DAVID ICKE bravely puts forward his research, based on confidantes of Princess Diana, which suggests that the crash in Paris was the beginning of a gruesome occult ritual with the time and place of the crash being chosen carefully to coincide with ancient Satanic Rites. Davids excellent book THE BIGGEST SECRET is also discussed in this film.

What exactly did the Queen mean when she warned Diana's butler PAUL BURREL, that there were "dark and mysterious forces" at work in Britain?

What was Henri Paul doing the hours immediately before he turned up for work on that fateful night?

Why was the SIPA press agency in Paris broken into following the death of a Paparazzi photographer?

Who were the senior MI6 and MI5 agents in the tunnel on the night of the crash?

Why was Klaus Werner deported after standing vigil outside Dianas apartment?

All these questions and much more are answered in this film, which was edited in a constantly moving vehicle and deposited at the DVD factories on the day that the British inquiry heard the father of Dodi AlFayed pronounce that his sons death was a case of Black & White MURDER.

The historical part of this film proves, using extensive photos, newspaper cuttings, film clips and testimonies, that the royal family have stabbed and slashed their way to power throughout the ages.

The producers have invoked FAIR USE guidelines in the making of this film. All proceeds will be used to offer subsidised courses in film making, which will be announced later this year.

I would like to thank all the patient and loyal subscribers to the Enigma Channel your support has made this important film possible.

Our comment: Another first-class release from Enigma Motion Pictures. When you learn the information this disk contains you'll completely understand why the Diana inquest will not and indeed cannot ever conclude there was a conspiracy by the Royals to kill her. This is another major piece of the conspiracy puzzle and a powerful one at that.

Thursday, May 10, 2012

Diana Was 'Mentally ill' Claims Author Penny Junor

Princess Diana pictured at a Breast Cancer Research charity dinner at Nina Hyde Centre in Washington in 1996
Princess Diana pictured at a Breast Cancer Research charity dinner at Nina Hyde Centre in Washington in 1996
As a veteran royal biographer, Penny Junor is sanguine about criticism.
Which is lucky, because critics of her latest book on Prince William, Born To Be King — serialised in the Mail this week — accuse her of being an insensitive, untruthful, poisonous, hatchet merchant who moonlights as Camilla Parker Bowles's public-relations guru and is probably in love with Prince Charles.
She has written books about both Charles and Diana, and was on their first official visit (to Wales) when Diana was pregnant with William. So it seems natural she should have turned her attention to the young heir.
The eve of his 30th birthday (which falls next month) was, she felt, a suitable moment to release a biography — and she 'was genuinely interested because he seems such a sane man . . . and I wanted  to know how he was [that way] with  that childhood.'
But it is not the William in her book that has irked people — it is her portrait of  his mother.
The Diana whom Junor has described is an unsatisfactory and manipulative mother, prone to tantrums, self-indulgence and jealousy (she sacked nanny Barbara Barnes when William was four because she envied their strong bond).
Junor also reveals Diana was reluctant to warn William, then 13, about her infamous Panorama interview in 1995.
His Eton housemaster begged her to; eventually she agreed to talk to her son, for five minutes, telling him he would be proud of her. He was devastated as he watched it in his housemaster's study.
Penny tells me now that she believes Diana was unwittingly recreating the tension of her own childhood.
After her mother had suffered the early death of a son and the misery of a violent marriage, she left with her lover, Peter Shand Kydd, when Diana was six.
'It meant that Diana didn't know how to be a mother. She lost hers at an early age. And Diana had a serious mental illness. Bulimia is not just about trying to get slim. It's all about control: the one thing you can control is your diet.
'Diana's early life was chaos. She was dishonest [with others] because that is part of the disease.'
Hence, she didn't think the Panorama programme would upset her children, with its revelations of 'three of us in this marriage' and her unhappiness with Charles, because she simply couldn't see it from anyone else's point of view.
This week, Junor critics have pointed out that Charles gave his own TV interview to Jonathan Dimbleby before Diana did Panorama. So shouldn't Charles take the blame for the television confessionals?
'He never criticised her. She, on the other hand, said Charles was a bad father, bad husband and shouldn't be King, so she took it up a notch,' Junor responds.
The general objection to her book is: how can she 'applaud two horrid adulterers' — as one disobliging comment describes Charles and Camilla — at the expense of Diana?

 

Let he without sin cast the stone, Junor says. 'I have been called vile, villainous and evil for criticising Diana, but what the public saw of her was very different to what her family saw. She was unstable and difficult to live with. Even her brother acknowledged her problems at her memorial service.
'She wasn't speaking to her own mother at the time she died.' Junor concedes that Diana could also be very loving: 'She could be expansive, enchanting, demonstrative . . . she could light up a room.'
This was the sunny Diana who first met Charles. According to Junor, the moment Charles proposed, Diana turned into an unhappy creature and he blamed himself.
Charles, Junor insists, is 'a deeply honourable person who loves his children'. Yet she is adamant  that she is not his spokeswoman  or ally.
Coming in for criticism: Penny Junor photographed at the Dean Street Town House, in Soho, London
Coming in for criticism: Penny Junor photographed at the Dean Street Town House, in Soho, London
To be fair, he does not get away lightly in her book, coming across as weak, difficult and moody. 'It's not easy to be the son of Charles,' a friend of his says at one point.
As Junor tells me: 'He grew profoundly depressed when his marriage wasn't working.
'The man I interviewed in 1987 was already deeply unhappy. He wanted that marriage to work, he wanted what his friends had — a happy family.
'He wanted someone to support him, to help him, to be with him and boost his confidence, and he felt personally responsible for the failure of the marriage.
'Camilla is a red herring; he  didn't start seeing her again until Diana had been unfaithful [with her bodyguard Barry Mannakee in 1986, before James Hewitt].
'People talk about this big love affair between Charles and Camilla, and yes, it had been in the Seventies, but he knew that wasn't the  way forward.'
However, he was 32 and Diana was just 20 when they married, so wasn't he more responsible for the mismatch?
Junor replies Charles was 'a vulnerable character. He always felt undermined by his father, and his mother had never been very affectionate.'
Princess of Wales and retired US General Colin Powell share a smile while attending the United Cerebral Palsy annual dinner in New York in 1995
Princess of Wales and retired US General Colin Powell share a smile while attending the United Cerebral Palsy annual dinner in New York in 1995
In an amazing piece of miscommunication, he proposed after receiving a letter from the Duke of Edinburgh saying he must make up his mind about Diana.
Philip, Junor believes, meant that he must decide because it wasn't fair to keep the media attention on Diana if he wasn't serious.
But Charles took this as an instruction to propose, and so he did.
'Until he asked her to marry him, Diana was the most delightful, bouncy, funny, charming girl who seemed to love everything about him.
'He thought: “I might not be in love with her just yet, but I easily could, because she is adorable and everyone adores her.” On paper, she was perfect. She was the daughter of an Earl, her father had been an equerry and lived on the Sandringham estate, and the Spencers and the Royal Family had intermingled over centuries.
'But the minute they got engaged, she turned into a stranger — he was committed and thought the problems were him and the stress of the engagement.
'And he was a coward.'
Diana, the Princess of Wales, during her visit to Leicester to formally open The Richard Attenborough Centre for Disability and Arts in 1997
Diana, the Princess of Wales, during her visit to Leicester to formally open The Richard Attenborough Centre for Disability and Arts in 1997
Junor is dismissive of the idea that Charles 'intended to use Diana as brood mare and then abandon her'.
'It was no picnic for him,' Junor says. 'He lived with a sense of failure for years.'
She accepts that her critics will never agree with her belief that the Prince didn't stray, nor even intend to, until the marriage had irretrievably broken down. 'I wasn't in the room with them, but that is what I think,' she says.
It might have been a perfect match on paper but, in reality, joining the Royal Family could hardly have been worse for the fragile Diana.
She had been brought up not only almost without a mother but 'without discipline. She'd never been made to stick at anything — finishing school, dancing classes... she could give up whenever she liked. 'And the Royal Family is all about discipline.'
Given this, it is remarkable that William and Harry have turned out as well as they have.
Two things, says Junor, 'can send children off the rails — a lack of love, and loss'.
She believes the loss of nanny Barbara Barnes and then Diana had a dreadful impact on both boys, but the one thing that they never lacked was love.
'They were surrounded by it. One of the strengths of “The Firm” is that there are so many people around to be attached to.
'And they are close to their grandparents.'
'Until he asked her to marry him, Diana was the most delightful, bouncy, funny, charming girl who seemed to love everything about him.'
Penny Junor
Although the Queen has had a distant relationship with Charles, she is very close to William. 'She stepped in after Diana died, asking him for tea at Windsor Castle, over the bridge from Eton,' says Junor.
His relationship with Philip, too, seems easy and affectionate.
Both grandparents are proud of William and Harry. Junor writes in her book that Harry's wildness is exaggerated and, anyway, a part of military life: periods of intense pressure followed by bouts of keen boozing.
'William was just as bad, but he never got caught.' [Though he never took drugs, as far as anyone knows; and Junor does know because she lives in Wiltshire and hears the Cotswolds gossip.]
Harry may be blessed with a sort of relaxed 'just do it' mentality, but initially it was the other way round.
William used to be the more confident child but, unsurprisingly, things got to him. You have to understand that his childhood spiralled out of control. He has overcome it very well, but is still the result of it.
'Partly because of the difficulties in his parents' marriage, partly because of the approach they  took — both spilling their guts to the world.'
Consequently, William has adopted a different approach to the media. He shares little and expects his friends never to talk about him to the Press.
That background, Junor believes, explains his extended eight-year courtship of Kate. 'He had lost women he loved, so he had to test her to see whether she, too, would abandon him.'
The Prince of Wales and Lady Diana Spencer in the grounds of Buckingham Palace after announcing their engagement in 1981
The Prince of Wales and Lady Diana Spencer in the grounds of Buckingham Palace after announcing their engagement in 1981

She adds that their (high-profile) split in 2007 was not the only one; there had been 'cooling-off periods' while they were at St Andrews, when they had gone on holiday with other people — because, as Junor writes, 'he questioned whether it was possible to be faithful to just
one woman. They weren't always as lovey-dovey as the Press made out. Kate was always the more clingy,' she tells me, 'but also so normal, and that appealed to him, as did her happy family.'
At one point in the book, a tutor claims that Kate is 'just another girl in a pashmina'. But Junor thinks it is precisely this down-to-earth side of Kate that appeals to William. 'A “me, me, me”, more flamboyant kind of girl, or a fashion icon, wouldn't have suited him at all.
'She's steady and normal, although I'm sure she can also be  great fun. She seems very  well-balanced.'
To a boy who longed for normality, the Middleton kitchen table in Bucklebury, Berkshire, must have seemed like heaven.
'The Firm': the Queen Mother (centre) on her 90th birthday in 1990 with her family. Princess Diana is at the back with Prince Edward
'The Firm': the Queen Mother (centre) on her 90th birthday in 1990 with her family. Princess Diana is at the back with Prince Edward
And Junor does not buy some readers' views this week that Kate, or her mum, Carole, for that matter, are schemers. 'Kate waited for eight years, which doesn't suggest scheming to me. She is quiet and self-contained, and William can spot a sucker-up a mile away. And he adores her family. If Carole was as she has been presented, he would have noticed.
'Yes, she is tough, a bit of a social climber — anyone who has struggled might hope their daughter marries well — but you'd have to be insane or stupid to want to marry into the Royal Family for a nice life.
'A year after he married Kate, William has a wife who is level-headed, absolutely adores him and hasn't had her head turned by fame.'
Interestingly, it was the Queen to whom William turned for advice about his wedding.
'She is wise, decisive and thoughtful,' Junor says. 'She has seen and  done everything, and has a calmness.' On that, at least, everyone can agree.


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-2142167/Ive-called-vile-evil-telling-truth-Diana-The-author-royal-book-year-hits-critics-insists-Diana-mentally-ill.html#ixzz1uU78aALX