A magistrate has ordered former French
president Nicolas Sarkozy to face trial for exceeding
election expenses during his failed 2012 campaign.
The Paris prosecutor's office said 13
others would also face trial over the so-called “Bygmalion Affair”, which has
involved charges of spending overruns and funding irregularities.
Mr Sarkozy's representatives have said
they will appeal the decision.
He has repeatedly denied knowledge
of the overspend because he was not involved in the details of his
campaign finance. Sarkozy calls for nationwide burkini ban
Mr Sarkozy was previously placed under investigation in a probe into
his campaign funding.
His 2012 re-election campaign costs
were more than twice the legal limit.
The charge exposes the 62-year-old conservative
politician, who led France for five years from 2007, to a one-year prison
sentence if convicted.
It is alleged he exceeded the spending
limit of €22.5m (£19m) through false invoices issued by the Bygmalion PR
company.
The decision to put Mr Sarkozy on trial
comes as French politicians face growing scrutiny over their personal finances
in the build-up to this year's presidential election in April and May.
Mr Sarkozy's conservative predecessor
Jacques Chirac was convicted in 2011, after his retirement, of misusing public
funds to keep political allies in phantom jobs.
That was the first conviction of a
French head of state since Nazi collaborator Marshal Philippe Petain in 1945.
Far-right presidential candidate Marine
Le Pen is also being pursued by the European Parliament to refund money paid to
her bodyguard and another person.
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