Sarkozy urged to speak up for Strauss-Kahn | Inquirer News

Sarkozy urged to speak up for Strauss-Kahn

/ 06:21 PM May 19, 2011

PARIS—France’s opposition Socialist party on Thursday urged President Nicolas Sarkozy to pressure US authorities to ensure Dominique Strauss-Kahn is given a fair chance to defend himself on sex assault charges.

Socialist Party spokesman Harlem Desir appeared to suggest Sarkozy should urge New York judges to free the former IMF chief on bail “so that Dominique Strauss-Kahn can organize his defence in a decent fashion.”

Desir noted that Sarkozy had previously intervened in the case of “other French people caught up in judicial matters abroad… We do it when it concerns one of our compatriots in Mexico or in other countries.”

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This appeared to be a reference to Florence Cassez, a Frenchwoman arrested in Mexico in 2005 along with her boyfriend, an alleged gangleader, and jailed for 60 years for kidnapping, organized crime and weapons possession.

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French officials believe there were shortcomings in her trial and Sarkozy has urged his Mexican counterpart Felipe Calderon to allow her to come home, without success, provoking a diplomatic row.

Strauss-Kahn, a leading Socialist and former finance minister who was expected to run against Sarkozy in next year’s presidential election, was arrested in New York on Saturday as he prepared to fly to Paris.

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The 62-year-old managing director of the International Monetary Fund is accused of attacking a 32-year-old chamber maid in his luxury hotel suite, subjecting her to a sexual assault and attempting to rape her.

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He resigned as head of the IMF late Wednesday and on Thursday his lawyers plan to go to court to seek bail, backed by the offer of a million dollar bond and a promise that Strauss-Kahn will remain in a New York apartment.

Desir said Sarkozy’s intervention should show “respect for the judicial institutions of the United States” but complained: “I really can’t understand why it was felt absolutely necessary he remain in detention.”

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TAGS: Crime, France, IMF, Politics, Sarkozy, Strauss-Kahn

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