Two years after Diana's fatal car crash, Londoners remember the Princess of Wales with flowers and photographs left outside the gates in front of her home, Kensington Palace.

The people's princess is also being remembered with a new rose bred and named especially for her.

England's Royal National Rose Society has launched the new breed called England's Rose. It's a creamy pink flower with a delicate, yet deceptively powerful fragrance.




However, many people are wondering why no one has built a permanent memorial for Diana.

The Mirror newspaper has started a petition to build a monument to the princess. So far the newspaper has received more than 140,000 calls of support.




Plans for a memorial garden near Kensingtons Place were quietly dropped after local residents objected. Instead the Diana memorial fund will invest in refurbishing a nearby children's playground.

Diana's family plan to remember the princess privately. Her sons Prince William, 17, and Prince Harry, 14, are spending the day at Balmoral, the royal estate in Scotland.

Diana, her companion Dodi Fayed and their driver, Henri Paul died in a car crash in a tunnel in France in August 1997. Only bodyguard Trevor Rees-Jones survived the accident.

French press reports suggest that a Paris judge will later this week drop charges of manslaughter against photographers pursuing her car the night of the accident.