“I Didn’t Dare Look at Diana’s Face” – Dr. MonSef Dahman, the First to Treat Her, Reveals Chilling Truth After 27 Years of Silence: “Diana Wasn’t Hit by That Car – It Was Actually…”
More than two decades after the untimely death of Princess Diana shocked the world, a chilling new revelation has emerged from the very doctor who first treated her on that tragic night in Paris — and it’s left the world stunned.
Dr. MonSef Dahman, the French surgeon on duty at Pitié-Salpêtrière Hospital on the night of August 31, 1997, has broken his silence in an emotional, exclusive interview. His voice low and trembling, he recounted what he saw — and what he now believes really happened.
“I didn’t dare look at her face at first,” he said. “There was a silence in the room. It wasn’t just shock — it was something heavier. Something I couldn’t explain back then.”
For years, the world was told Diana died from internal injuries following a high-speed car crash inside the Pont de l’Alma tunnel. Investigations concluded it was an accident caused by a drunk driver and aggressive paparazzi. But Dr. Dahman’s new account adds unsettling details that suggest otherwise.
“She had wounds, yes — but not the kind I expected from a high-speed crash,” Dr. Dahman claimed. “There were internal injuries that looked more… deliberate. Targeted. There was no sign she’d been thrown violently forward or hit in the way they said. It didn’t make sense.”
According to Dr. Dahman, he was quickly surrounded by “unusual” visitors in suits who appeared at the hospital shortly after Diana arrived. He says he was urged to follow a certain “narrative” about her condition and eventual death — despite what he was seeing firsthand.
“I was a young surgeon at the time, and I didn’t know what I was being pulled into. But I was told to focus on stabilizing her — not to question the injuries, not to speak to press, and above all, not to speculate.”