The
former French President Nicolas Sarkozy was questioned by officers at Nanterre police
station, west of Paris, on Tuesday as part of a five-year investigation into
the allegations.
The
probe centres on funding for Mr Sarkozy’s victorious 2007 presidential
election campaign.
Police launched an investigation
into alleged misuse of power, forgery, abuse of public money, and money
laundering in April 2013.
A
year earlier, the investigative news website Mediapart published
documents suggesting Libya made cash payments to Mr Sarkozy’s campaign
of up to €50m (£44m).
The
legal campaign funding limit at the time was €21m (£18m). The alleged
payments would also have violated French rules on foreign financing and
declaring the source of campaign funds.
Mr Sarkozy, who
served as President from 2007 to 2012, has always denied receiving any illicit
campaign funding and has dismissed the Libyan allegations as “grotesque”.
In
January, a French businessman suspected by investigators of funnelling the
money from Gaddafi was arrested in Britain. He was bailed after appearing in a
London court.
Mr
Sarkozy is already set to stand trial in a separate matter concerning
the financing of his failed re-election campaign in 2012, when he was defeated
by Francois Hollande.
The
Gaddafi case gained traction when French-Lebanese
businessman Ziad Takieddine claimed he delivered suitcases
containing €5m in cash to Mr Sarkozy and his former chief of
staff Claude Gueant.
In
the Mediapart interview published in November 2016,
Mr Takieddine alleged he was given the money in Tripoli
by Gaddafi’s intelligence chief on trips in late 2006 and 2007.
He
said he gave the money in suitcases full of cash to Mr Sarkozy and
Mr Gueant on three occasions, and claimed claimed the handovers took
place in the interior ministry while Mr Sarkozy was interior
minister. Mr Gueant has also denied the allegations.
Mr Takieddine has
for years been embroiled in his own problems with French justice, centred
mainly on allegations he provided illegal funds to the campaign of conservative
politician Edouard Balladur for his 1995 presidential election
campaign.
Mr Sarkozy had
a complex relationship with Gaddafi. Soon after becoming the French
President,
Mr Sarkozy invited the Libyan leader to France for a state
visit and welcomed him with high honors.
But
Mr Sarkozy then put France in the forefront of Nato-led air
strikes against Gaddafi’s troops that helped rebel fighters topple
his regime in 2011
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