Charles Spencer has never forgotten his first meeting with journalist Martin Bashir.
It was August 31, 1995. Two years later, to the day, her sister, Diana, would be no more.
Count Spencer establishes a direct link between these two events.
And for four years, he has discreetly but surely continued his crusade against the directors of the BBC whom he always accuses of “concealing the truth” about the Bashir affair.
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Last week, the British public channel was supposed to deliver the documents that the courts have been demanding from it for two years.
No less than 3,288 internal emails which could testify to what its leaders said to each other when the scandal broke out, in the winter of 2020. But it was covered with a thick line of black marker that the documents appeared .
Redacted.
Simply unreadable.
“We crossed out what was not interesting,” explained the BBC.
That is to say almost everything.
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