PARIS: French former President Nicolas Sarkozy is to be investigated over allegations that he accepted cash from former Libyan dictator Muammar Qaddafi to fund his 2007 election campaign.
Judicial sources confirmed yesterday that a formal probe has been opened that could lead to Sarkozy facing a second set of corruption-related charges arising from his campaign.
Sarkozy, 58, was charged last month with taking advantage of a person incapacitated by illness in a case that centers on allegations he accepted envelopes stuffed with cash from France’s richest woman, Liliane Bettencourt.
He adamantly denies any wrongdoing and is suing investigative news website Mediapart over the Libya allegations. Mediapart reported last April that Qaddafi’s regime had contributed 50 million euros to Sarkozy’s successful 2007 campaign.
Ziad Takieddine, a Franco-Lebanese businessman who is embroiled in a series of political financing scandals in France, has also repeatedly claimed that he has proof Sarkozy was financed by the Libyans but has refused to make his evidence public.
Qaddafi’s regime was toppled and he himself was killed in 2011 following an uprising backed by a NATO intervention that Sarkozy was instrumental in organizing.
That won him international acclaim but his reputation has been blighted since leaving office last year by a slew of judicial probes into his conduct during his time as president or as a government minister.
As well as the Libya and Bettencourt cases, he is the subject of ongoing investigations into alleged cronyism in the awarding of contracts for opinion polls, an illegal police investigation into journalists and alleged kickbacks on a Pakistani arms deal. Sarkozy lost his immunity from prosecution after losing the 2012 presidential election to Francois Hollande.
Sarkozy investigated over Qaddafi funding claims
-
{{#bullets}}
- {{value}} {{/bullets}}