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News ID: 83919
Publish Date : 17 October 2020 - 22:06

Sarkozy Under Probe for Receiving Money From Gaddafi

PARIS (Dispatches) -- French prosecutors said Friday that they had slapped criminal conspiracy charges on former president Nicolas Sarkozy over claims he used Libyan cash for his 2007 election campaign.
The charge for "membership in a criminal conspiracy” was brought on Monday, the prosecutors told AFP.
It adds to charges lodged in 2018 of "passive corruption,” "benefitting from embezzled public funds” and "illegal campaign financing” for which Sarkozy already faces trial.
The latest charge, which can be appealed under French law, came after prosecutors interviewed the rightwing conservative for more than 40 hours over four days.
Prosecutors suspect that Sarkozy and his associates received dozens of millions of euros from the regime of former strongman Muammar Gaddafi to help finance his election bid.
Last month, a Paris appeals court threw out Sarkozy’s bid to have the investigation dismissed, making a trial more likely.
Sarkozy, 65, denies the charges that were sparked by investigative website Mediapart in 2012, when it published a document purporting to show that Gaddafi agreed to give Sarkozy up to 50 million euros ($59 million at current rates).
In his defense Sarkozy -- who is himself a trained lawyer -- has claimed presidential immunity, and said there is no legal basis in France for prosecuting someone for misusing funds from a foreign country.
Judges are also investigating claims by a French-Lebanese businessman, Ziad Takieddine, who said he delivered suitcases carrying a total of five million euros from the Libyan regime to Sarkozy’s chief of staff in 2006 and 2007.
Sarkozy’s former ministers Claude Gueant and Eric Woerth are also charged in the case, which is not the only legal headache for the former rightwing president, who is no longer active in politics.
He has also been charged in two other cases, one relating to fake invoices devised to mask overspending on his failed 2012 re-election campaign, and another for alleged influence peddling.
Having already stepped back from a front-line public role in 2016 after he failed with a bid to run again for president, Sarkozy said after being charged in 2018 that for him "politics is finished”.
During their time in power, Sarkozy and Gaddafi enjoyed surprisingly cordial ties, with the French president allowing the Libyan strongman pitch his Bedouin tent opposite the Elysee Palace on a state visit to France just months after his election.
However, four years later in 2011 Sarkozy joined the West-led military campaign that carpet-bombed Libyan capital of Tripoli and other key installations to force Gaddafi’s downfall, leaving oil-rich country in total disarray – a situation that still persists today.