The Star Malaysia

Sarkozy: I will restore my honour

Beleaguere­d ex-French president ‘finished’ in politics, vows to clear his name

-

PARIS: Former French president Nicolas Sarkozy vowed to clear his name after being charged with financing his 2007 election campaign with money from late Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi, but admitted he was “finished” in politics.

“It might take me one, two, 10 years but I’ll smash this group (of accusers) and will restore my honour,” he said during an emotioncha­rged primetime television interview yesterday evening. “I don’t plan to give an inch!” Having already stepped back from a frontline public role in 2016 after he failed with a bid to run again for president, Sarkozy told his interviewe­r on the TF1 channel that for himself “politics is finished”.

In an defiant halfhour performanc­e that saw him shake with indignatio­n at times, Sarkozy frequently referred to his accusers from Gaddafi’s regime as “sinister”, “liars” and a “group of killers”.

“If you had told me that I would have problems because of Gaddafi, I would have said: ‘What are you smoking?’” Sarkozy said at one point, claiming that investigat­ors had not found a single piece of evi dence against him.

The 63yearold, who served as the French leader from 2007 to 2012, was charged with corruption, illegal campaign financing and concealmen­t of Libyan public money on Thursday evening after two days of questionin­g in police custody.

Under the French system, charging a suspect means that investigat­ors believe they have strong and corroborat­ed evidence against them, but the defendant can appeal and the case can still be dropped before a trial.

The allegation­s that Sarkozy took money from Gaddafi – whom he welcomed to Paris in 2007 but then helped to topple in 2011 – are the most serious out of several investigat­ions that have dogged him since he left office.

“I am hurt deeply as a person, not for me, for my country,” Sarkozy said in his concluding remarks on the TF1 channel. “You can’t drag people into the mud because some killers wanted to do it. I can’t let them get away with it.”

Earlier in a statement released to Le Figaro newspaper, Sarkozy said he had been “living the hell of this slander since March 11, 2011”, when the first allegation­s against him emerged via Gaddafi’s son, Seif alIslam.

Since 2013, investigat­ors have been looking into claims by several figures in Gaddafi’s ousted regime that Sarkozy’s campaign received cash from the dictator.

In 2011, as Natobacked forces were preparing to drive Gaddafi out of power, Seif alIslam told the Euronews network that Sarkozy must “give back the money he took from Libya to finance his electoral campaign”.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia