Sarkozy denies taking ‘a single cent’ from Gaddafi

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The former French president has again rejected allegations that his 2007 campaign was bankrolled by Libya, as an appeals court re-examines the case Former French President Nicolas Sarkozy has claimed that “not a single cent” from Muammar Gaddafi’s Libya found its way into his 2007 election campaign, at an appearance before a Paris appeals court on Tuesday.He is appealing a five-year prison sentence handed down in 2025 after being found guilty of criminal conspiracy in a case centered on alleged efforts to secure covert Libyan funding for his presidential bid between 2005 and 2007. He briefly served part of the sentence before being released under judicial supervision pending the outcome of the appeal, and has consistently denied any wrongdoing.At the opening of his questioning on Tuesday, Sarkozy attacked the case against him, calling it a “construction” built on “lies and hatred” and claiming there had been “not a single cent” of Libyan money in his campaign. He denied that Gaddafi had any hold over him “financially, politically or personally,” telling the court: “I am innocent.”Nine co-defendants are reportedly being retried alongside Sarkozy, including former ministers and senior aides. Several have also denied wrongdoing. Read more Gaddafi’s son assassinated: Libya’s Rubicon crossed The case dates to 2011, when Saif al-Islam Gaddafi, son of Muammar Gaddafi, claimed that his father had provided up to €50 million ($58 million) to support Sarkozy’s campaign. Investigators later examined contacts between Sarkozy’s associates and Libyan officials in the years leading up to the 2007 election.Sarkozy, who led France from 2007 to 2012, was at the forefront of a NATO-backed regime-change operation which destroyed Libya and led to Gaddafi’s murder.The war brought thousands of jihadist fighters into the country, devastated Libya’s economy, and opened a migration route toward southern Europe that precipitated an ongoing crisis.Prosecutors say the suspected dealings predated the conflict. Some observers have suggested the war effectively buried any potential evidence linked to the alleged funding arrangements. READ MORE: Sarkozy released from prison despite conviction The appeal trial is due to run until June 3, with a verdict expected later this year. If upheld, the conviction could expose Sarkozy to a sentence of up to ten years in prison.