London

Di’s driver Henri Paul may have tipped off paparazzi

Diana driver Henri Paul's parents told he wasn't drunk: Coroner tells jury

London, Oct 4 : The inquest into Princess Diana’s death has heard that there was an apparent discrepancy between what Lord Stevens said to the parents of Henri Paul when he met them in Paris on 8th November 2006 and what was said in the Operation Paget report.

The inquest jury looked at the statement wherein Lord Stevens told Paul's grieving parents that their son had not been drinking heavily on the night of the crash, as well as the contradicting official Operation Paget report into the tragedy which concluded Diana and Dodi died because Paul was drunk and speeding.

Images of Diana’s last smile screened in court

London, Oct 4 : Heartrending images of Princess Diana smiling for the last time were screened for the jury hearing at the inquest into her death.

The previously unreleased footage was captured by security cameras in the Ritz-Carlton Hotel in Paris on Aug. 30, 1997, just hours before Diana and boyfriend Dodi Fayed commenced their final journey.

In one of the video sequences, Diana is shown escorted across the marble floor of the Ritz lobby by Dodi after arriving at the rear entrance of the hotel in the Rue Cambon.

Red Wine & Rice Made Supplements Thwart Cancer

RED WINELondon: One of the fundamental things you can do to lessen your cancer risk is just eat in a right manner.

Well, if it looks tricky in today’s confused lifestyle, don’t feel troubled. You can also take pills made from red wine, sticky rice, berries and spice, as a supplement every day to keep away from cancer.

Diana was on the Pill when she died: Coroner

London, Oct 4 : The ongoing inquest into Princess Diana’s death has further dismissed controversial claims about her being pregnant with boyfriend Dodi Al Fayed’s child at the time of her death, by revealing that she was on contraceptive pills.

Lord Justice Scott Baker said that while it may never be possible to prove “100 per cent” whether Diana was pregnant, the inquest jury would hear “intimate details of her personal life” which appeared to show she was not.

Pills made from berries, rice and wine may stave off cancer

London, October 3: Laboratory experiments conducted at the University of Leicester have shown that compounds extracted from sticky rice, red wine, berries, and spice have the potential to fight against cancer.

Professor Will Steward, an expert in molecular medicine, has revealed that tests on human cells have shown that drugs made from the foods and wine may reduce the risk of cancer by 40 per cent.

The researcher said that such drugs could be taken like daily vitamins to protect against tumours in the breast, bowel and prostate.

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