Former French president Nicolas Sarkozy. PHOTO | AFP
Former French president Nicolas Sarkozy was taken into police
custody on Tuesday for questioning over suspected Libyan financing of
his 2007 election campaign, a source close to the inquiry told
AFP.
AFP.
Sarkozy,
63, had until now refused to respond to a summons for questioning in
the case, which drew heightened scrutiny last November when a
businessman admitted delivering three cash-stuffed suitcases from the
Libyan leader as contributions towards the French leader's first
presidential bid.
Sarkozy's detention was first reported by the Mediapart investigative news site and French daily Le Monde and comes several weeks after a former associate, Alexandre Djouhri, was arrested in London and later released on bail.
Djouhri
was returned to pre-trial detention in February after France issued a
second warrant for his arrest, ahead of a hearing scheduled for March
28.
A source close to the inquiry also said that Brice
Hortefeux, a top government minister during Sarkozy's presidency, was
also questioned Tuesday as part of the inquiry.
Before
his arrest in January, Djouhri, a 59-year-old Swiss resident, was well
known among France's rightwing political establishment, and had refused
to respond to summons for questioning in Paris.
He has
been a focus of the inquiry opened in 2013 by judges investigating
earlier claims by late Libyan ruler Muammar Gadhafi and his son Seif
al-Islam that they provided funds for Sarkozy's election effort.
Sarkozy
has dismissed the allegations as the claims of vindictive Libyan regime
members furious over his participation in the US-led military
intervention that ended Gadhafi's 41-year rule.
Franco-Lebanese
businessman Ziad Takieddine said he had made three trips from Tripoli
to Paris in late 2006 and early 2007 with cash for Sarkozy's campaign.
Each
time he carried a suitcase containing 1.5 to 2.0 million euros in
200-euro and 500-euro notes, Takieddine claimed in a French media
interview, saying he was given the money by Gadhafi's military
intelligence chief Abdallah Senussi.
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