Daily Mail

DIANA SCANDAL

Bashir out of BBC

- By Sam Greenhill and Paul Revoir

LORD Dyson last night delivered his crunch report on the Princess Diana Panorama scandal – as Martin Bashir quit the BBC.

The retired judge handed in the results of his inquiry to corporatio­n top brass at 6pm. It will be published next week.

Meanwhile, staff were told the BBC’s religion editor had resigned for health reasons.

Lord Dyson has spent six months probing allegation­s that Mr Bashir used rogue tactics to land his Panorama scoop with the princess in 1995.

The corporatio­n commission­ed the former Master of the Rolls to investigat­e last November after the Daily Mail revealed claims Mr Bashir had peddled royal smears and lies to trick Diana into the interview, in which she famously declared ‘ there were three of us in this marriage’.

Last night a spokesman for the inquiry announced: ‘Lord Dyson has concluded his investigat­ion and the report has been passed to the BBC for publicatio­n in due course.’

The bombshell report is expected to examine claims of a cynical cover-up mounted by BBC chiefs in 1996 after the Mail on Sunday revealed how Mr Bashir had used forged bank statements to lure the princess into his trust.

Former BBC director-general Tony Hall – who only left the post last August – is among those whose role has been scrutinise­d by Lord Dyson. Lord Hall led an initial inquiry in 1996 that was later branded a ‘whitewash’.

Yesterday Jonathan Munro, the BBC’s deputy director of news, told staff in an email that Mr Bashir, who has been on sick leave for months, had ‘stepped down’ and was ‘leaving the corporatio­n’.

He added: ‘He let us know of his decision last month, just before being readmitted to hospital for another surgical procedure on his heart.

‘Although he underwent major surgery toward the end of last year, he is facing some ongoing issues and has decided to focus on his health. We wish him a complete and speedy recovery.’

It is understood Mr Bashir, 58, who sold his London townhouse in November and moved to Winchester, telling colleagues it was a ‘sad way to retire’, did not receive any payoff.

Mr Bashir joined the BBC as a news correspond­ent in 1986 and moved to ITV in 1999. After a stint in America he rejoined the corporatio­n in 2016 as religious affairs correspond­ent.

The former star reporter already knows of any criticisms levelled at him in the Dyson report.

He gave evidence to the inquiry, and as part of a formal process known as ‘Maxwellisa­tion’ he was sent a courtesy letter containing an indication of the judge’s findings about him, offering a chance to reply before they were made public.

Mr Bashir, Lord Hall and all the other participan­ts – including Diana’s brother Earl Spencer – will be given an opportunit­y to read the Dyson report two hours before it is made public next week.

The delivery of the Dyson report has also thrown into turmoil a plan for Panorama to broadcast a special investigat­ion into itself.

The flagship current affairs show had commission­ed veteran investigat­ive journalist John Ware to make a programme about the Diana interview scandal and the claims that BBC chiefs had tried to hush it up.

The special was originally slated for broadcast a month ago, but was then delayed by the death of the Duke of Edinburgh.

A new plan to transmit the programme next Monday has now also been shelved. Mr Ware did not take calls or respond to messages yesterday.

A BBC source claimed the Panorama programme had been postponed rather than cancelled, and added that the reason for its delay was because of a ‘duty of care issue’. Companies owe a duty of care to their employees, particular­ly when they are on sick leave.

A third source with knowledge of the programme claimed: ‘Martin Bashir played the health card aggressive­ly through his lawyers to block the Panorama being aired.’

The Dyson inquiry was prompted by revelation­s in the Mail last November. Diana’s brother Earl Spencer told how Mr Bashir had used a ruse involving faked bank statements to trick him into introducin­g the reporter to his sister.

Mr Bashir asked a graphic artist, Matt Weissler, to mock up the statements purportedl­y showing the earl’s head of security was receiving money from newspapers.

The BBC journalist was then accused of feeding the vulnerable princess a shocking list of lies to make her believe her own staff were betraying her too by selling informatio­n to the papers and the security services. Among the jaw-dropping claims, Mr Bashir allegedly showed Diana a fake abortion ‘receipt’ for royal nanny Tiggy Legge-Bourke – a prepostero­us slur.

He allegedly told the princess her husband was ‘in love’ with William and Harry’s nanny, among dozens

‘Sad way to retire’

of other smears designed to hook Diana into trusting him.

To secure his explosive interview, he also allegedly told her that her bodyguard was plotting against her, and MI6 had recorded Prince Charles and his private secretary planning the ‘end game’.

He was said to have lied that Prince Edward was having treatment for Aids at the Royal Marsden Hospital, and that the Queen was a ‘comfort eater’ with ‘heart problems’. Earl Spencer kept meticulous notes during the meeting, which he shared with Lord Dyson during his own interview with the former judge.

Another conundrum the Dyson inquiry was examining was a burglary Mr Weissler suffered soon afterwards – in which the only items stolen were computer disks containing the forged documents.

It is understood a number of witnesses have told the former judge they recall how shaken up the graphic artist was after his flat was raided.

Mr Weissler was later made the fall guy for the scandal, with the BBC board of governors presiding over a decision he would never work for the corporatio­n again.

The BBC said it would not comment ahead of the publicatio­n of the Dyson report.

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 ??  ?? Lured into his trust: Diana the year before her infamous Panorama interview with Bashir, inset, in 1995
Lured into his trust: Diana the year before her infamous Panorama interview with Bashir, inset, in 1995

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