Oman Daily Observer

Defiant Fillon stays in French campaign

LATEST TWIST: The presidenti­al aspirant says he is the victim of a ‘political assassinat­ion’ and blames media

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PARIS: French presidenti­al candidate Francois Fillon announced on Wednesday that judges had summoned him to press charges over an expenses scandal but vowed to continue his campaign.

The 62-year-old conservati­ve former premier was favourite at the start of the year to win the French presidency after clinching the nomination for the Republican­s party in November.

But he has since been hit by a series of allegation­s that he paid his Britishbor­n wife Penelope and his children hundreds of thousands of euros since 1988 for allegedly fake parliament­ary jobs.

Fillon said the charges were “entirely calculated to stop me being a candidate for the presidenti­al election.”

“I won’t give in, I won’t surrender and I won’t withdraw,” he told a press conference on Wednesday.

It is the latest twist in an extraordin­ary campaign that has regularly wrong-footed observers ahead of the two-stage contest on April 23 and May 7.

Last week, French prosecutor­s launched a full judicial inquiry into Fillon’s use of his parliament­ary budget, increasing pressure on his campaign which has been in crisis since allegation­s first surfaced in January.

He has been summoned charged on March 15.

Fillon has been defiant throughout the affair, insisting publicly that the facts would exonerate him and to be reminding his party that they have few attractive alternativ­es to replace him.

He said on Wednesday he was the victim of a “political assassinat­ion” and has accused the media of trying to “lynch” him.

He has pointed the finger at President Francois Hollande and the socialist government, which he believes has encouraged the investigat­ions to discredit him.

Recent surveys suggest that farright leader Marine Le Pen and centrist candidate Emmanuel Macron are the two most likely to progress from the first round of the election on April 23.

Macron, a 39-year-old who only launched his political movement “En Marche” (“On the Move”) last April, is currently shown as the winner of a run-off vote on May 7.

He urged the justice system to be “allowed to do its work as normal” while reminding Fillon that victory in the election would not mean he was cleared.

The allegation­s against Fillon are particular­ly damaging after he campaigned as a sleaze-free reformer ready to administer a “radical” economic overhaul and cut wasteful public spending.

He has also had to backtrack on a previous pledge to withdraw if ever he was charged.

“I submit myself before the French people, because only the ballot box, and not an investigat­ion directed against me, can decide who will be the next president of the republic,” he said on Wednesday.

Fillon had postponed a visit to a key farm show earlier in the morning and announced the press conference, sending the rumour mill into overdrive amid speculatio­n he would withdraw.

Though employing a family member is not illegal in France, Fillon has not published evidence publicly of Penelope’s work beyond her contracts which show various periods of employment since 1988.

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 ?? — Reuters ?? Francois Fillon visits the Internatio­nal Agricultur­al Show in Paris.
— Reuters Francois Fillon visits the Internatio­nal Agricultur­al Show in Paris.

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