Published: 3:15PM Thursday November 05, 2009
Source: Reuters
Source: ReutersFormer French President Jacques Chirac
Former French President Jacques Chirac said he was ready to
appear in court over accusations of embezzlement during his time as
mayor of Paris and was determined to clear his name.
Chirac, 76, was ordered last week to stand trial over allegations
that when he was mayor; the Paris City Hall handed out contracts
for non-existent jobs as a favour to people who were politically
useful.
"I want to be able to establish the reality of the facts rapidly so
that this page can be turned definitively," Chirac said in an
interview to be published in Thursday's edition of the daily Le
Figaro.
No former French head of state has been prosecuted for corruption
and the case has stirred huge media interest in France.
The Paris prosecutor's office, which had opposed the decision to
send Chirac to trial, said it would not appeal the judge's
decision, removing a potential obstacle to a court hearing.
The centre-right Chirac, 76, was mayor from 1977 until 1995, when
he was elected president.
He enjoyed constitutional immunity during his 12 years as head
of state but has been hit by legal problems since leaving office in
2007.
Chirac and nine others have been ordered by judge Xaviere Simeoni
to stand trial over 21 contracts from the 1990s.
"I have accepted her decision even if I dispute her analysis of the
situation, so I will go to explain the position with the 21 jobs
that are still under discussions," Chirac said.
"I note that originally, almost 500 jobs were examined by the
justice system and people were talking about a real "system", he
said.
"Today we can see that there is nothing in any of that."
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