Businessman linked to Sarkozy funding claims extradited to France

Alexandre Djouhri faces trial for bribery following inquiry into suspected Libyan funding of former president

(FILES) In this file photo taken on February 26, 2019 shows French-Algerian businessman Alexandre Djouhri arriving at Westminster Magistrates court in central London to attend an extradition hearing. Key figure in the Libyan financing affair, Alexandre Djouhri, was claimed for years by French justice. He arrived on January 30, 2020 at Roissy airport and should be presented within 24 hours to French anticorruption magistrates in preparation for his indictment. / AFP / Niklas HALLE'N
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A businessman at the heart of an inquiry into alleged Libyan financing of French ex-president Nicolas Sarkozy's 2007 election campaign was charged Friday with bribery, judicial sources said.

Alexandre Djouhri, 60, was handed over to authorities in Paris on Thursday after being extradited from Britain.

The businessman, who has ties to Sarkozy's former right-hand man Claude Gueant, among other French politicians, was arrested at Heathrow airport in January 2018 under a European warrant issued by French judges.

He is charged with bribing a foreign public servant, being complicit in and concealing the embezzlement of public funds by a person in a position of public authority, and laundering the proceeds of tax fraud and bribery.

The allegations that Mr Sarkozy's campaign received up to 50 million euros from Muammar Qaddafi's regime, first emerged during his failed 2012 re-election bid.

Mr Sarkozy would later help remove the Libyan leader from power when France and Britain led a NATO-backed military offensive in 2011.

In 2018, Mr Sarkozy was charged with taking bribes, concealing the embezzlement of Libyan public funds and illegal campaign financing.

He denies the allegations, claiming that an explosive Libyan document presented by investigative French news site Mediapart as proof of the corruption is a fake.

Investigators are examining Mr Djouhri's alleged involvement in the 2009 sale of a villa on the French Riviera to a Libyan investment fund managed by Bashir Saleh, Col Qaddafi's former chief of staff.

Mr Djouhri is suspected of having been the true owner of the property, which was registered in someone's else name. He is accused of selling the villa at a vastly inflated price to mask payments allegedly made by the Libyan regime towards Sarkozy's campaign.

Mr Djouhri has denied ever being the villa's owner. He is further accused of paying 500,000 euros to Gueant to ensure his assistance in various business affairs.

He fought the extradition campaign against him and was allowed to remain in his London home during the majority of the UK extradition battle after collapsing with heart problems inside prison.

But he exhausted all efforts to fight the case and was ordered to return to France last week.

Mr Gueant, who has also been charged with laundering the proceeds of tax fraud, claimed the money came from the sale of two paintings.