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Diana wants a ban on the
pictures |
1993: Diana sues over gym photos |
England have
Lawyers acting for the Princess of Wales have started legal action over
secretly-taken pictures of her exercising which were published last week
by a national newspaper.
Writs have been issued against Mirror Group Newspapers (MGN), the gym
where Princess Diana was photographed and the gym's owner.
The writs seek a permanent ban on the publication of the pictures which
show the princess clad in a leotard and cycling shorts.
They also demand that all copies and negatives should be handed over to
the princess' solicitor.
The photos, taken by gym owner Bryce Taylor, were first published in
the Sunday Mirror and then again in yesterday's Daily Mirror.
Princess Diana has already won a High Court injunction against Mr
Taylor and MGN banning further publication of the pictures.
She also wants to prevent the sale and publication of them outside of
the UK, which could potentially earn New Zealand-born Mr Taylor hundreds
of thousands of pounds.
The judge ordered him to provide detail of all agreements relating to
the photographs and identify everyone to whom they had been passed.
They have already been published in other countries.
Holland's biggest daily, De Telegraaf, ran one of the pictures on its
front page.
In the US, a tabloid newspaper group has bought the American rights to
the pictures for ?5,000.
After publishing the pictures the Mirror felt the backlash of
widespread public outrage and some large companies withdrew their
advertising.
But a defiant spokesman for the company claimed sales of yesterday's
paper and the Sunday Mirror had both risen by more than 100,000.
Princess Diana's decision marks a new approach by the royal family,
which has traditionally resisted using the law to hit back.
She could become the first member of the royal family to testify in a
courtroom since 1891 when the then Prince of Wales gave evidence for a
friend in a libel action.