Scottish Daily Mail

Philip to drive at Balmoral... even though he has no licence

- By Rebecca English Royal Correspond­ent

Prince Philip will continue to drive on the Queen’s private estates, despite giving up his driving licence following last month’s horrific crash.

Buckingham Palace said yesterday that if 97-year-old Philip chooses to drive on private land then it would be in ‘accordance with all relevant regulation­s’.

royal sources later disclosed that they had heard nothing to suggest that he would not be driving on estates such as Sandringha­m in norfolk, where the accident that injured two women occurred, Balmoral in Aberdeensh­ire and Windsor in Berkshire. Sandringha­m is 20,000 acres, Balmoral around 50,000 and the Queen’s private park at Windsor is 655 acres.

Someone who is driving on private property with the owner’s permission does not need a licence to do so. But it is likely that estate staff will have to carefully lay out the parameters of where the Duke of edinburgh is allowed to drive.

All the Queen’s estates are crisscross­ed by footpaths and minor roads, meaning he could inadverten­tly break the law if he is not careful. A palace spokesman did not deny the suggestion that Philip would continue to get behind the wheel and told the Daily Mail: ‘if the Duke does drive on private land in future this will, of course, be in accordance with all relevant regulation­s.’ On Saturday Buckingham Palace announced that he had taken the decision to ‘voluntaril­y surrender’ his driving licence. A source insisted it was ‘entirely’ Philip’s decision to do so.

Some lawyers suggested at the time of the accident that doing this could help the Queen’s husband avoid prosecutio­n.

But on Saturday norfolk Police said the investigat­ion into his crash has led to a file being submitted to the crown Prosecutio­n Service, which will decide whether he should be charged.

in the worst-case scenario, Philip faces a magistrate­s court on a charge of driving without due care and attention, which carries a maximum £5,000 fine.

The cPS said: ‘We review each file carefully before a decision is made and will take this developmen­t into account.’

Philip has admitted in a letter that he was dazzled by sunlight as he drove his Land rover Freelander out of the Sandringha­m estate on January 17 onto a busy main road, colliding with a Kia carrying two women and a baby.

The 28-year-old driver of the Kia suffered cuts to her knee and her passenger, emma Fairweathe­r, 46, was left with a broken wrist.

The Queen brightened up a rainsoaked day when she went to church on the Sandringha­m estate yesterday in a vivid yellow outfit with a matching hat.

 ??  ?? Colourful: The Queen at church at Sandringha­m yesterday
Colourful: The Queen at church at Sandringha­m yesterday
 ??  ?? Legal exemption: Prince Philip can drive on private land
Legal exemption: Prince Philip can drive on private land

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom