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AMSTERDAM, Netherlands (AP) – Prince Bernhard, the German-born father of the Netherlands’ Queen Beatrix whose service as a pilot for the Allies earned him the respect of his adopted country, died Wednesday. He was 93.

Bernhard was diagnosed with cancer in mid-November, and last week the Royal House said tumors had spread to his stomach and lungs, causing difficulty breathing. He was moved Wednesday to Utrecht University Medical Hospital, where he later died.

“In consultation with the prince, no further measures were taken in the hospital,” the Royal House said in a statement.

The prince was living at the royal palace in Soestdijk, which he shared for six decades with his wife, the former Queen Juliana, who died in March at the age of 94.

Bernhard, one of the most popular figures in the royal family, received a stream of family visitors in recent days. Prime Minister Jan Peter Balkenende, who addressed the nation later Wednesday, said the “whole country sympathized” with him in his illness.

Bernhard gained respect from the Dutch with his service as a pilot for the Allies in World War II and his help in rebuilding the Netherlands, devastated by Nazi occupation. But his image was tarnished by a bribery scandal late in his wife’s reign and by his openly rocky marriage and affairs.

Regular broadcasts on Dutch television and radio were interrupted for the announcement of his death. The Dutch national anthem was played in his honor.

Tall, handsome and active into his 90s, Bernhard was a dapper dresser, with glasses and a trademark carnation in his buttonhole. For the Dutch, Bernhard was an avuncular presence throughout the second half of the 20th century.

Outside the Netherlands, he was seen as a jet-setting, charismatic ambassador for the Dutch during postwar reconstruction. He helped found the World Wildlife Fund in 1961 and became its first president. He also is credited with establishing the Bilderberg group – a secretive annual discussion forum for prominent politicians, thinkers and businessmen – which he chaired from 1954 to 1976.

Bernhard was born Bernhard von Lippe-Biesterfeld, of impoverished German nobility, at Jena on June 29, 1911.

He is survived by the queen and three other daughters and more than 20 grandchildren and great-grandchildren. Funeral arrangements were not immediately available.

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