Sarkozy held on bribery claims
FRANCE: Former French president Nicolas Sarkozy was taken into police custody yesterday over allegations he illegally accepted 50 million euros (NZ$85.4m) from the government of the late Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi to finance his successful 2007 presidential campaign.
The detention of Sarkozy – France’s president between 2007 and 2012 – represented a major development in what is now likely to become an explosive political scandal.
Sarkozy has repeatedly denied allegations he took money from Gaddafi, slamming the accusations as ‘‘grotestque’’ and ‘‘crude manipulation’’.
Although an investigation began in 2013, yesterday marked the first time authorities have questioned Sarkozy on the matter. Under French law, authorities can hold a suspect in custody for up to 48 hours before deciding whether there are sufficient grounds to launch a formal investigation.
Brice Hortefeux, who served as France’s interior minister under Sarkozy, was also questioned by police, but not taken into custody.
If the allegations are true, it would mean Sarkozy knowingly violated France’s campaign finance laws, which in 2007 capped campaign funding at 21 million euros. In the presidential election that year, Sarkozy narrowly defeated Socialist Segolene Royal in the final round of the vote.
Investigators and journalists have long scrutinised potential connections between the former Centre-Right president and Gaddafi. In 2012, Mediapart, a French investigative news outlet, drew on a memo allegedly from Libyan security service archives to report that Sarkozy’s campaign had received 50 million euros from Gaddafi’s government.
In November 2016, Ziad Takieddine, a French-Lebanese millionaire arms dealer and the uncle of human rights lawyer Amal Clooney, told Mediapart that he oversaw the cash transfer of a portion of that money to Sarkozy’s chief of staff, Claude Gueant, in late 2006 and early 2007.
‘‘I discovered things that should no longer stay hidden,’’ Takieddine said to Mediapart. He is also the man who first introduced Sarkozy to Gaddafi.
In 2015, French judges filed preliminary charges against Gueant in connection with the case. In January, Alexandre Djouhri, a French businessman, was arrested at London’s Heathrow Airport in connection with the probe. He was released on bail and is fighting extradition to France.
The Libya scandal adds to what was already known to be a complicated relationship between Sarkozy and Gaddafi.
After his victory in 2007, Sarkozy welcomed Gaddafi for a state visit. But by 2011, Sarkozy had established France as a leading player in the Nato coalition that ultimately toppled Gaddafi’s regime.
The allegations also intensify public scrutiny of Sarkozy, who is set to stand trial in a separate case concerning allegations that his unsuccessful 2012 re-election campaign illegally exceeded campaign spending limits. Sarkozy has denied those accusations, too.
He would not be France’s first former head of state to face a conviction.
In 2011, his predecessor, Jacques Chirac, received a suspended sentence of two years for the misuse of public funds, although the conviction pertained to activities dating to his tenure as mayor of Paris, not to his presidency. –