Former French President Nicolas  Sarkozy, convicted of criminal conspiracy in a scheme to get funds for  his 2007 election campaign, will serve his prison term in solitary  confinement, AFP has reported.
  rt.com
  On September 25, a Paris court  sentenced Sarkozy, 70, to five years behind bars over a 2005 plot to  obtain secret campaign funds from the late Libyan leader Muammar  Gaddafi. According to the court, he offered to help restore Libya’s  standing in international affairs in return for the payments. The  presiding judge cited the “exceptional gravity” of the offense in ordering that the ex-president be jailed even if he appeals.
  President  of France from 2007 to 2012, Sarkozy has become the first former leader  of an EU member state to be jailed. His sentence is likely to begin on  Tuesday.
  On Sunday, AFP quoted unnamed prison staff at Paris’s La  Sante jail as saying that he will likely be held in a nine-square-meter  (95-square-foot) cell in the prison’s solitary-confinement wing. The  arrangement was reportedly chosen to minimize his contact with other  inmates.
  Sarkozy denounced the verdict as an “injustice”  and insisted on his innocence. His lawyers have filed an appeal and are  expected to request that the sentence be converted to house arrest once  he is incarcerated.
                                                                                                                                                                     
   READ MORE: Why putting Sarkozy in prison would be a mistake.
    The investigation of claims made by Gaddafi’s son Saif al-Islam, in  March 2011, that his father had transferred around €50 million ($54.3  million) to Sarkozy’s campaign, officially began in 2013.
  Sarkozy  played a leading role in NATO’s intervention, which led to Gaddafi’s  overthrow and subsequent murder by anti-government armed groups in  October 2011.
  Since then, the ex-president has been convicted in  two separate cases involving corruption, influence-peddling, and illegal  campaign financing charges, both of which resulted in house arrest. |