World

Sarkozy denies Gadhafi offered him election funding

French President Nicolas Sarkozy vows to file a complaint against a news website that claims to have evidence he was offered campaign financing from late Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi for his first presidential bid.

French president says he will file complaint against news website

French President Nicolas Sarkozy says he will file a complaint before the end of the current presidential campaign denying any truth to the claim he was offered campaign financing from late Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi. (Michel Euler/AP)

French President Nicolas Sarkozy has vowed to file a complaint against a news website that claims to have evidence he was offered campaign financing from late Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi for his first presidential bid.

Sarkozy has vigorously denied the allegation, which was first levied by one of Gadhafi's sons last year as France was pressing for international airstrikes against Gadhafi's forces to end a crackdown on rebels.

Although no evidence has emerged that the funding ever took place, French website Mediapart reported Saturday it had obtained a 2006 Libyan document signed by Gadhafi's then-intelligence chief Moussa Koussa with an offer by the regime to spend $65 million Cdn on Sarkozy's campaign.

Sarkozy said Monday that he would file a complaint before the end of the current presidential campaign, again denying that there was any truth to the claim.

Complaint could lead to charges

"Those who lie, those who tell falsehoods should be condemned by the justice system," he told France 2 television Monday. Once the complaint is filed, prosecutors will have to decide if it warrants an investigation, which could lead to charges.

Sarkozy, who is trailing challenger Socialist Francois Hollande in the polls for Sunday's presidential runoff, also accused Mediapart of being a mouthpiece for the left.

Francois Bonnet, the editorial director for the site, rejected that accusation.

"It's simply grotesque and defamatory," he said.

Hollande also dismissed the claim, saying he had no link to the site and noting that it sometimes goes after politicians on the left.

"[Do] I need newspapers to bring up scandals? You think that's how I plan to win the presidential election?" Hollande asked on Europe-1 radio.