| Sarkozy behind bars: the conviction dividing France 
 The Week UK
 
 
  
 “For the first time in the  history of the Fifth Republic, in a few weeks a former head of state  will be sleeping in prison,” said  Le Monde.  Nicolas Sarkozy’s five-year sentence for criminal conspiracy has left  the country in a state of shock, and the former president incandescent  with rage.
 
 Funds from ‘bloodstained hands’
 
 Outside a court in  Paris last week,  Sarkozy  railed against the “limitless hatred” of the judges, who he claimed  were pursuing a left-wing witch-hunt against him. But his punishment is  commensurate with his “shameful” crime: seeking illegal presidential  campaign funds from the “bloodstained hands” of Libyan dictator  Muammar Gaddafi.
 
 The  court found that in 2005, when Sarkozy was minister of the interior,  his associates met Abdullah al-Senussi, Gaddafi’s brother-in-law and the  mastermind of a 1989 attack on a French airliner, to discuss whether  the regime would provide campaign funds in exchange for lifting the  arrest warrant against him. It was a clear abuse of authority by a man  “fuelled by ambition, the thirst for power, and greed”, said Thomas  Legrand in  Libération.
 
 Sarkozy  is only incensed because he believed he was invincible. He is the last  “prototypical figure in this era of all-powerful presidents” who assumed  they could do anything, because all would be swept away “by the grace  of their triumph”.
 
 ‘Bizarre, contradictory verdict’
 
 Sarkozy’s left-wing opponents are giddy with delight, said Yves Thréard in  Le Figaro.  But “everything about this bizarre, contradictory verdict is  incomprehensible”. Where’s the crime? “There was talk of millions, yet  no one saw any of it.”
 
 Nor was there any evidence of personal  enrichment. Sarkozy was cleared of three of the four charges – illegal  party funding, embezzlement of Libyan funds and corruption. Yet for the  lesser charge – the more vague “criminal conspiracy” – Sarkozy was not  only given five years in jail, but the sentence wasn’t even suspended  pending appeal, as is customary in France. It’s hard not to suspect the  judiciary’s visceral dislike of Sarkozy played a role. (In 2013, photos  of his face were found pinned on the office wall of one of their  professional unions, under the words, Le Mur des Cons: the Wall of  Idiots.)
 
 This scandal is much murkier than either side wants to admit, said Hugh Schofield on  BBC News.  Sarkozy is far from spotless: an “egotistical and highly influential  political operator”, he has a “litany of lawsuits against him” and has  already been convicted on two other charges of corruption. There’s  plenty of evidence to suggest he “consistently pushed the law to its  limits in order to get his way”. But equally, there are some in the  Paris “politico-mediatic-judicial” establishment “who loathe the former  president and rejoice in bringing him down”.
 
 Sarkozy’s opponents shouldn’t be too smug, said Paul Quinio in  Libération.  By confirming the suspicion that mainstream politicians are all as  corrupt as each other, this scandal “has only served to deepen the rift  between the French people and their political representatives”. In that  cynical climate, the only winner is the  far-right, who have “never been closer to power”.
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