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Previously unseen footage of Princess Diana, captured during a contentious journey mere months before her untimely death, has been made public for the first time.
The remarkable behind-the-scenes video documents Diana’s significant visit to Angola in January 1997, where she passionately advocated for a worldwide ban on landmines.
Taking place just eight months before her tragic accident in Paris, this pivotal trip stirred intense political debate, leading some to label the princess as a “loose cannon,” a term used by a prominent political figure at the time.
Ministers from the Conservative government launched a wave of criticism against Diana’s efforts, contending that her push for a global ban could be seen as aligning with the Labour Party’s stance on the matter.
During that period, the Conservative Party maintained that it would only support a worldwide ban if there was unanimous agreement among all nations.
Now, as part of a new episode of ITV’s Reporting History, this rare footage from Diana’s influential journey is being shared with the public.
The remarkable sit-down interview showed Diana, then 35, being asked by Steve Scott, then ITV News’ Africa Correspondent, whether she saw herself taking a ‘new hands-on role’ in her future, in light of the trip.
In response, Diana said: ‘I don’t know, I already answered this Jenny.’
At another stage during the clip, Diana appeared to directly address the controversy surrounding her landmark visit.
When Scott queried whether he could ask the princess ‘that question about the political role’, Diana quipped: ‘I would have thought that was the most important question.’
Off-camera, Diana’s team appeared hesitant, with one individual heard saying: ‘No, not the political one, you don’t mean the political one.’
However, the princess insisted that she would like to answer Scott’s question. Holding her hands up, she replied: ‘No, no, I mean the one saying I’m not a political figure,’ before flashing a brief coy smile.
Unseen footage of Princess Diana taken on a controversial landmine trip to Angola just months before she died has been released for the very first time
The remarkable sit-down interview showed Diana, then 35, appear to directly address the controversy surrounding her landmark visit. The historic trip sparked vast political controversy and saw the princess dubbed a ‘loose cannon’ by a leading political figure
Dressed head to toe in body armour, Diana was famously captured calmly striding down a path surrounded by landmines from East Germany, Russia and China, alongside mine removal expert Paul Heslop from charity organisation The Halo Trust.
‘My mind was in overdrive trying to make sure I wasn’t going to be the most famous person in the world the next day for blowing up the Princess of Wales,’ Mr Heslop later told the BBC.
Diana also remotely detonated a live landmine, declaring ‘one down, 17 million to go’ as she pushed the button on January 15, 1997.
However, the trip also saw numerous public figures express their disdain.
Earl Howe, then junior defence minister for the Conservatives, reportedly described Diana as a ‘loose cannon’ who was ‘ill-informed on the issue of anti-personnel landmines’.
Yet, British ambassador Roger Hart claimed that Diana saw such criticism as an ‘unnecessary distraction’, while Mike Whitlam, then director general of the Red Cross, thought they were merely a ‘piece of mischief’.
At the time, the Daily Mail described her famous landmine walk as an effort to ‘focus worldwide attention on the menace of anti-personnel mines and the plight of their victims’.
Meanwhile, Diana herself pledged: ‘All I am trying to do is help. I am trying to highlight a problem that is going on all around the world, that’s all.’
In January 1997, Princess Diana (pictured) visited Angola and strode down a path surrounded by landmines from East Germany, Russia and China to campaign for a global ban on their usage
The princess was brought to tears when she met then 16-year-old Sandra Thijika (pictured), a victim of a landmine explosion, and watched on as the young teenager was measured for a prosthetic leg after a nine-year wait
‘I’m not a political figure, nor do I want to be one. I come with my heart and I want to bring awareness to people in distress, whether it is in Angola or any part of the world,’ the princess told reporters at the time.
‘The fact is I am a humanitarian figure, always have been and always will be.’
According to a Foreign Office dispatch document from Angola released by the National Archives in 2020, the ‘furore’ over Diana’s seemingly controversial presence in Angola ‘had little local impact on the visit’.
‘The Angolan authorities were delighted that the Princess made the visit. The British Red Cross were pleased and so too was the Princess of Wales,’ added Mr Hart.
Images of the princess walking through the minefield sent shockwaves around the globe and the high-profile coverage helped raise global awareness of landmines and the repercussions they caused for innocent people.
The princess was brought to tears when she met then 16-year-old Sandra Thijika, a victim of a landmine explosion, and watched on as the young teenager was measured for a prosthetic leg after a nine-year wait.
A poignant image of Sandra sat on the princess’s knee underneath a fig tree at an orthopaedic centre was broadcast around the globe and highlighted the exponentially high death and disability rates the country was enduring due to landmines.
22 years later, Sandra revealed that she had named her young daughter after Diana in a loving tribute to the princess who she fondly described as a ‘friend’.
‘I gave my daughter the name Diana because I loved her and she was such a good person. I loved her way with people. She was famous and she made me feel famous — I will never forget her,’ she emotionally recalled.
‘We were not together long but when she left I felt I was saying goodbye to a friend.’
At the time of the princess’s visit, one in every 300 people in Angola had lost a limb due to the more than 15 million landmines across the country.
For Diana, her trip to Angola marked just the beginning of her landmine campaign work, with the princess also making a three-day visit to Bosnia in August of that year. Heartbreakingly, it would be her final humanitarian trip.
‘She was talking about following it up with visits to other heavily-mined countries such as Vietnam, Cambodia and Kuwait,’ added Mr Hart.
These future campaigning trips never occurred. Just seven months later, on August 31, 1997, Diana tragically died in a car crash in Paris.
Yet the impact of her high-profile landmine visit would live on in the aftermath of her death.
According to Lou McGrath, who co-launched Mines Advisory Group (MAG) in 1989, Diana’s trip marked a ‘turning point’ in the campaign for a global landmine treaty.
Speaking to the BBC on the 20th anniversary of the princess’s death, Mr McGrath said: ‘She’d been heavily criticised by MPs for being political, but actually governments of the world had agreed it was a humanitarian issue.
‘Without her we couldn’t have brought forward what was the fastest arms control treaty in the world.’
Shortly after Diana’s death, recently elected Prime Minister Tony Blair pledged to ratify the Ottawa Treaty, a key international agreement that bans the use, production, stockpiling and transfer of anti-personnel landmines, by the first anniversary.
In December 1997, 122 governments signed up to the Ottawa Treaty, officially known as the Convention on the Prohibition of the Use, Stockpiling, Production and Transfer of Anti-Personnel Mines and on their Destruction.
The life-changing policy entered into force on March 1, 1999, with 164 countries now parties to the treaty.