The BBC reopened the 1995 interview with Princess Diana. ‘He couldn’t come at a bad time’


Many believe the BBC got Diana to agree to the interview under false pretenses. A report by CNN anchor and correspondent Max Foster said Bashir had long been accused of using forged documents to suggest that the palace staff was working against Princess Diana and that her spy was being paid.

With the new director general at the BBC, those allegations are being revisited. It could not come at a more inconvenient time for the media company: the BBC is currently focusing on negotiating a future funding package with the British government. The outlet’s publicly funded model is facing increasing scrutiny, including from UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson.

“The media landscape has changed beyond recognition in the 25 years since Diana sat down with Bashir,” Foster pointed out.

But the BBC’s director general Tim Dewey is dedicated to investigating the circumstances of the interview. A retired senior judge will lead the investigation.

“We will make every effort to get to the bottom of this,” Davy said in a statement.

Matt Weissler, who was a graphic designer for the BBC at the time, confessed to mocking the bank’s statements after reaching out to Bashir, saying he “needed some bank statements.” Princess Diana’s brother Charles Spencer has claimed that Bashir tricked her by showing her false bank statements and asked the reporter to introduce her sister.

The Daily Mail’s Richard Kay said: “

According to Charles Anson, the Queen’s press secretary at the time, Buckingham Palace was turned a blind eye by a 1995 interview.

“There wasn’t much we could say,” Ans told CNN.

But palace staff were instructed to support the princess, Foster reports.

Shortly after the interview, in 1996, the BBC launched an internal investigation and concluded that the documents were forged, but did not play a role in Diana’s decision to take part in the interview.

Bashir did not defend himself in public, and he did not respond to CNN’s request for comment. He is currently on leave, recovering from heart surgery and complications from Covid-19, according to a BBC statement.

– CNN’s Max Foster contributes to this report.

Correction: The previous version of this story incorrectly stated the year of the BBC interview. It was conducted in 1995.

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