Paris (AFP) - French ex-president Nicolas Sarkozy was detained for questioning on Tuesday over allegations the late Libyan dictator Moamer Kadhafi financed his 2007 election campaign, including with suitcases stuffed with cash, a source close to the inquiry told AFP.
Sarkozy,
63, was taken into police custody early Tuesday morning and was being
questioned by officers specialising in corruption, money laundering and tax evasion
at their office in the western Parisian suburb of Nanterre.
AFP's
source said that Brice Hortefeux, a close ally who served as a senior minister
during Sarkozy's presidency, was also questioned Tuesday as part of the
inquiry.
The case is
France's most explosive political financing scandal and one of several legal
probes that have dogged the rightwing politician since he left office after one
term in 2012.
Since 2013,
investigating magistrates have been probing media reports, as well as
statements by Kadhafi's son Seif al-Islam, that claimed funds were provided for
Sarkozy's run at the presidency.
"Sarkozy
must first give back the money he took from Libya to finance his electoral
campaign," Seif told the Euronews network in 2011 as NATO-backed forces
were driving his father out of power.
Sarkozy has
dismissed the allegations as the rantings of vindictive Libyan regime members
who were furious over France's military intervention in Libya that helped end
Kadhafi's 41-year rule and led to his death.
He has also
sued Mediapart, which has led media coverage of the Libyan allegations since
2012 when it published a document allegedly signed by Libya's intelligence
chief showing that Kadhafi had agreed to fund Sarkozy to the tune of 50 million
euros ($62 million).
![]() |
Hortefeux,
seen here on the left, was also questioned by police, as well
as Sarkozy,
pictured right (AFP Photo/Eric Feferberg)
|
The case
drew heightened scrutiny in November 2016 when a Franco-Lebanese businessman
admitted delivering three cash-stuffed suitcases from the Libyan leader in 2006
and 2007 as contributions towards Sarkozy's first presidential run.
In an
interview, again with Mediapart, Ziad Takieddine claimed he dropped 1.5 to 2
million euros in 200-euro and 500-euro notes each time and was given the money
by Kadhafi's military intelligence chief Abdallah Senussi.
When asked
about the allegations during a televised debate in 2016, Sarkozy called the
question "disgraceful" and said the businessman was a
"liar".
The legal
investigation is looking into these allegations, as well as a 500,000-euro
foreign cash transfer to Sarkozy ally Claude Gueant, and the sale of a luxury
villa in 2009 in the south of France to a Libyan investment fund for an
allegedly inflated price.
Ties to
Libya
Sarkozy,
who takes a hard line on Islam and French identity, was nicknamed the
"bling-bling" president during his time in office for his flashy
displays of wealth.
He failed
with a bid to run again for president in November 2016 and has stepped back
from frontline politics since then, though he remains a powerful figure behind
the scenes at the rightwing Republicans party.
![]() |
| Takieddine admitted delivering three cash-stuffed suitcases from the Libyan leader in 2006 and 2007 as contributions towards Sarkozy's first presidential run. (AFP Photo/PHILIPPE LOPEZ) |
The
Republicans party offered its "full and complete support to former
president Nicolas Sarkozy" in a statement, adding: "We wish to remind
everyone about the principle of the presumption of innocence that is valid for
everyone."
Seven
months after his 2007 presidential victory, Sarkozy invited Kadhafi to Paris
and clinched major arms and nuclear energy sales to the oil-rich north African
country, which has since descended into civil war.
The Libyan
autocrat was allowed to pitch his Bedouin-style tent on a lawn in central Paris
and attended a dinner at the presidential palace, which was boycotted by
several of Sarkozy's ministers.
Tuesday's
detention was not the first for Sarkozy: he became the first French president
to enter police custody in July 2014 over a separate inquiry into claims that
he tried to interfere in one of the several investigations targeting him.
The summons
on Tuesday came after another former associate, Swiss businessman Alexandre
Djouhri, was arrested in London in January.
Other
cases
Investigating
magistrates have recommended Sarkozy face trial on separate charges of illegal
campaign financing over his failed 2012 re-election bid.
The
prosecution claims Sarkozy spent nearly double the legal limit of 22.5 million
euros ($24 million) on his lavish campaign, using false billing from a public
relations firm called Bygmalion.
He faces up
to a year in prison if convicted, but he is appealing the decision to send him
to trial, claiming he knew nothing about the fraudulent practices that
Bygmalion executives have admitted to.
Only one
French president -- Jacques Chirac -- has been tried in France's Fifth
Republic, which was founded in 1958. He was given a two-year suspended jail
term in 2011 over a fake jobs scandal.



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