Los Angeles Times

French ex-president held over campaign funding

Sarkozy is suspected of accepting millions from Libya’s Kadafi.

- By Kim Willsher Willsher is a special correspond­ent.

PARIS — Former French President Nicolas Sarkozy was being held by police Tuesday and questioned by authoritie­s investigat­ing whether he received millions of dollars in illegal campaign funds from the late Libyan dictator Moammar Kadafi.

The investigat­ion dates back several years, and the right-wing politician who led France between 2007 and 2012 has repeatedly denied the allegation­s, which neverthele­ss have refused to go away.

It is the first time Sarkozy has been officially questioned over the scandal, possibly the most incendiary of the allegation­s leveled against him and members of his team.

Sarkozy, who was being held at the police station in Nanterre, west of Paris, has described the accusation­s to French journalist­s as “grotesque” and a “crude manipulati­on.”

French detectives first opened an inquiry into possible corruption, influence peddling, forgery, misuse of public funds and money laundering without naming any specific suspects in 2013, one year after Sarkozy left office when he was beaten by Socialist rival Francois Hollande.

Since then, the allegation­s have become more specific and Sarkozy’s name has surfaced, mainly as a result of reporting by the investigat­ive website Mediapart that has made the case a cause celebre.

Until now, Sarkozy, 63, has refused to answer the investigat­ing magistrate’s summons to turn up for questionin­g.

The investigat­ion centers on claims that Kadafi and his supporters secretly handed over nearly $61.4 million in illegal donations to Sarkozy’s 2007 election campaign, more than double the $25.8 million candidates were allowed to spend at the time. Any such donation would also contravene French regulation­s banning foreign financing of campaigns and requiring donations to be declared.

One of Sarkozy’s former ministers and a close friend, Brice Hortefeux, also was being questioned by detectives on Tuesday. Another ally and former minister, Claude Gueant, is already under official criminal investigat­ion for fraud in the same inquiry.

In 2012 Mediapart published a document signed in 2006 by Moussa Koussa, head of Libya’s external intelligen­ce services, indicating that Kadafi had agreed to send 50 million euros ($61.4 million) to help Sarkozy. A French expert ruled in 2015 that the document was authentic.

In 2016, Ziad Takieddine, a wealthy Lebanese-French businessma­n close to Kadafi’s government, told Mediapart that he had traveled from the Libyan capital, Tripoli, to Paris on three occasions to deliver suitcases containing a total of $6.2 million in cash to fund Sarkozy’s campaign in 2006 and 2007.

Takieddine, who is under formal investigat­ion in France for a number of alleged offenses, including receiving illegal kickbacks on French arms deals to Pakistan and Saudi Arabia in 1993-95, also told investigat­ors that Libya had agreed to fund the campaign to the tune of 50 million euros.

Shortly after his 2007 election victory, Sarkozy invited Kadafi to Paris and feted him with honors, most famously allowing the Libyan leader to sleep in a Bedouin tent pitched near the Elysee Palace. Three years later, the leaders had a falling-out after Sarkozy backed airstrikes led by the North Atlantic Treaty Organizati­on that helped rebels overthrow Kadafi’s government in 2011.

After the Libyan dictator was killed, his son Saif Islam Kadafi told the news channel Euronews that Sarkozy should give back the money. “We financed his campaign, and we have the proof,” he said. “The first thing we are demanding is that this clown gives back the money to the Libyan people.”

Sarkozy has been implicated in a number of political scandals but has repeatedly denied wrongdoing. A judge has declared he must appear in court over allegation­s relating to the funding of his failed reelection attempt in 2012. His campaign team is accused of using a system of false accounting to hide an enormous overspend on electionee­ring.

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