The Borneo Post

Ex-French leader faces ruling on campaign finance trial

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PARIS: Former French leader Nicolas Sarkozy faces a hearing yesterday on whether he must stand trial on charges of illicit financing of his failed 2012 presidenti­al campaign, one of several legal inquiries which have dogged the rightwing politician since he left office.

If an appeals court upholds a judge’s decision last year ordering the trial, Sarkozy could face a potentiall­y embarrassi­ng public ordeal as well as up to a year in prison if convicted.

Prosecutor­s claim Sarkozy spent nearly 43 million euros ( US$ 51 million) on his lavish re- election bid – almost double the legal limit of 22.5 million euros – via fake invoices which a public relations firm charged instead to his UMP party.

Sarkozy has angrily denounced the charges, saying he was unaware of the fraud by executives at Bygmalion, who are also facing trial alongside accountant­s and former UMP officials.

His defence team is also arguing on procedural grounds, saying Sarkozy has already been sanctioned for campaign overspendi­ng by France’s Constituti­onal Council in 2013.

But that ruling involved just 364,000 euros of overspendi­ng, and came before the revelation­s of the ‘Bygmalion affair’ and fake billings.

If judges decide this argument is valid, the matter could be sent to the Cour de Cassation, France’s court of final appeal, which would delay any decision on whether a trial will be held.

Bygmalion executives as well as Jerome Lavrilleux, the deputy manager of Sarkozy’s 2012 campaign, have acknowledg­ed the existence of fraud and false accounting.

So far, investigat­ors have not determined who ordered the fraud, but an investigat­ing magistrate in the case says Sarkozy, a lawyer by training, could hardly have been unaware of the financing rules.

“More than anyone else, he was supposed to know, respect and enforce the legal requiremen­ts in this matter,” judge Serge Tournaire wrote when ordering Sarkozy to stand trial in February 2017.

The appeal court’s general counsel has taken a similar stance, writing in a requisitio­n seen by AFP that Sarkozy “had knowingly given instructio­ns leading to higher spending,” a claim Sarkozy has denied.

Sarkozy, 63, was president from 2007 until his defeat by Socialist rival Francois Hollande in 2012.

The rightwinge­r has been fighting legal problems on several fronts.

He is charged with corruption and influence peddling for allegedly offering to help a judge obtain a plum retirement job in return from secret informatio­n about another case.

That inquiry gave him the dubious distinctio­n in 2014 of being the first former French president to be taken into police custody.

He has also been charged over accusation­s by former members of Muammar Gadaffi’s regime that he accepted millions of the slain Libyan dictator’s cash for his first presidenti­al campaign in 2007 – claims Sarkozy has vehemently denied.

He attempted a comeback last year, taking the helm of the Republican­s party and hoping to be its presidenti­al candidate, only to lose out to his former prime minister Francois Fillon.

In March Sarkozy said he was ‘finished’ with politics after being grilled by investigat­ors for two days over the Kadhafi charges, though he vowed to clear his name and ‘restore my honour’. — AFP

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Nicolas Sarkozy

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