Mohamed Al-Fayed has been pictured on his luxury yacht in St Tropez as
he prepares to mark the 20th anniversary of his son's death.
The 88-year-old looked deep in thought as he relaxed on the deck of Sakara, his 112ft-long boat.
It comes as the former Harrods owner looks set to mark 20 years since
Dodi Fayed and Princess Diana were killed in a car accident in Paris.
Al-Fayed has said he still mourns the death of his son twenty years
after they died and claims they were killed because they planned to
marry.
He claims to spend 300 days a year sitting beside his son's body, which
has been interred at a mausoleum in the grounds of his mansion near
Oxted in Surrey.
He also has left Dodi's Park Lane flat, where he took Diana during the
summer of 1997 before the pair died in a car crash, untouched as a
shrine to his son.
The billionaire believes they were killed by security services on the
order of Prince Philip to prevent her from marrying a Muslim, even
though he has no evidence.
One month after the claims were made by Mr Fayed in 2000, Harrods was
stripped of its 44-year-old royal warrant, which was granted by the Duke
of Edinburgh.
A spokesperson at Buckingham Palace said at the time it was due to a
'significant decline in the trading relationship' and refused to comment
on the matter further.
A close friend told The Sun: 'Mohamed believes they were in love and
were going to announce their engagement in London the day after the
tragedy. He will never get over the death of his son, or that of the
Princess — because of the love he had for both.'
Another source told the paper: 'Mohamed remains confident that
information will emerge confirming his belief that Dodi and Diana were
deliberately killed by the security services.
'He always says, "My son was slaughtered", and he believes that was
because the Establishment would not allow a Muslim to be married to the
woman who would be the mother of the future king.'
Despite his claims of a murder plot, an inquest held into the deaths of
Dodi and Diana ruled the pair died because of the 'grossly negligent'
driving of Henri Paul and the paparazzi in pursuit of their car.
Jurors blamed the 'unlawful killing' on driver Henri Paul and the group
of paparazzi photographers who were following his Mercedes.
Like the earlier French and British police investigations, the panel
concluded Mr Paul had been drinking and was speeding when the car hit a
pillar in the Alma underpass in Paris in August 1997.
They also singled out the paparazzi's speed and the way they were
driving as contributory factors, but concluded the couple could have
survived the accident had they been wearing seatbelts.
A Buckingham Palace source said: 'The inquest verdict speaks for itself.'
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