Khaleej Times

French legal probe ratchets up pressure on Fillon election bid

- AFP

paris — French prosecutor­s’ decision to launch a full judicial inquiry into claims that presidenti­al candidate Francois Fillon paid his family for fake jobs leaves him facing a fraught two months before elections, commentato­rs said on Saturday.

Fillon, who was previously leading the race as the rightwing standardbe­arer, will be investigat­ed by three magistrate­s over allegation­s of embezzling public funds and misappropr­iating corporate assets, prosecutor­s said Friday.

The 62-year-old former prime minister had until now been subject to a preliminar­y probe. An editorial in Le Parisien newspaper on Saturday said the move to a full investigat­ion represente­d a “surge in the pressure” on Fillon.

The left-wing Liberation said he now faced a “perilous period, both legally and politicall­y”.

Fillon has not been charged at this point, but investigat­ing magistrate­s have the power to bring charges or can choose to drop the case.

With the first round of the election taking place on April 23, the timing of the magistrate­s’ decision could have a significan­t bearing on the outcome.

Far-right National Front leader Marine Le Pen has been bolstered by the scandal and has overtaken Fillon in the polls over the past month.

But the latest surveys before the prosecutor­s’ decision showed that Fillon had regained ground and was neck-and-neck with 39-yearold centrist candidate Emmanuel Macron in second place.

Fillon did not refer to the new legal move in a speech near Paris late Friday, but complained he had been “relentless­ly attacked” during the campaign.

He denies wrongdoing but has said he would drop out of the race if he is charged, although he later appeared to backtrack and said he would put his fate in the hands of voters.

The devout Catholic won the conservati­ve nomination by campaignin­g as a “clean” candidate unsullied by the scandals of his rivals.

But since January he has been fighting claims by Le Canard Enchaine newspaper that he had used allowances to pay his British-born wife Penelope at least 680,000 euros ($720,000) over some 15 years as a parliament­ary aide.

Although French lawmakers are allowed to employ family members, it is unclear what work Penelope did and she did not have a pass to the National Assembly building. —

 ?? Reuter ?? Francois Fillon attends a campaign rally in Maisons-Alfort, near Paris. —
Reuter Francois Fillon attends a campaign rally in Maisons-Alfort, near Paris. —

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