Showing posts with label IMF. Show all posts
Showing posts with label IMF. Show all posts

Friday, 14 October 2011

The Guardian: Dominique Strauss-Kahn attempted rape inquiry dropped


Prosecutors say they have evidence ex-IMF chief sexually assaulted young French writer, but he will not face charges

French prosecutors said there was evidence Dominique Strauss-Kahnsexually assaulted a young French writer, but they have dropped the investigation against him for attempted rape.
The legal case over claims the former head of the IMF had attacked Tristane Banon was officially abandoned after the French prosecutor's office said no legal action could be brought.
In a statement, the office declared that a three-month police investigation had found insufficient evidence to charge Strauss-Kahn with attempted rape.
It added, however, that it recognised there were "facts that could qualify as sexual aggression".
It cited the three-year statute of limitations for sexual assault and concluded: "However, having been committed in 2003 and not having been revealed until July 2011, these facts cannot be prosecuted."
Banon, a 32-year-old author and journalist, learned that her case would not be prosecuted on the same day she published a book, said to be a "novelised" version of the alleged attack.
Her lawyer, David Koubbi, had already vowed to bring a civil case against Strauss-Kahn if the criminal action was dropped. This would mean an independent investigating magistrate being appointed to reconsider all the evidence.
Banon and Strauss-Kahn were among at least 12 people interviewed over the writer's claim that he tried to rape her when she went to interview him for a book.
Banon said Strauss-Kahn behaved like a "rutting chimpanzee" during the alleged attack at an unfurnished Paris apartment in February 2003.
Strauss-Kahn described the allegations as "imaginary". She claimed the assault amounted to attempted rape, for which the statute of limitations is 10 years.
Banon's book, Le Bal des Hypocrites (The Hypocrites' Ball), is described as a 128-page novelisation of events in her life.
It appears to be the latest salvo in a vitriolic battle of words between her and Strauss-Kahn, once tipped to become the next president of France.
Strauss-Kahn, 62, has admitted to police investigating Banon's claims that he made a pass at her and tried to kiss her, but denied any violence.
He has lodged a countersuit for defamation and threatened to sue media which repeat the allegations.
After Strauss-Kahn, once the French Socialist party's presidential hope, was arrested and accused of the sexual assault and attempted rape of a New York hotel maid in May, Banon said she spent weeks deciding whether to press charges.
When the US case against Strauss-Kahn collapsed in August because of doubts about the credibility of his accuser, Nafissatou Diallo, Banon made a formal complaint to the Paris prosecutor.
Strauss-Kahn returned to France with his third wife, television journalist Anne Sinclair, but his hopes of leading the country were finished.
In her book, an extract of which was published by Paris Match magazine, Banon writes of feeling sick when the man, assumed to be Strauss-Kahn, was being hailed as the next president before his arrest in New York.
"It was nine o'clock that Saturday morning and they were talking about the baboon on the television. He is a superhero, a Messiah, saviour … capable of everything.
"He would revive the country, lower taxes, understand the weakest and bring happiness and calm to each French household.
"They showed pictures of him; in action in the four corners of the world. Superman.
"When I saw him, his stare made me freeze, the television screen could not protect me, his smile was only for me, it forced its way into my stomach and the image only disappeared when I threw up my lunch.
"Suddenly his message on my telephone came back to me: 'So, I scared you?' That was eight years ago.
"The years have passed, but nothing has completely effaced the memory."
Banon, who is the goddaughter of Strauss-Kahn's ex-wife, first revealed the alleged attack on a French TV chatshow in 2007.
"I eventually spoke about it but I was too smiling when I did," she writes. "I should have cried so that people understood the real ravages it had caused.
"But alcohol had given my cheeks a rosy tint and, like Molière, I wanted to laugh about what had made me cry inside."
Banon says the show's other guests had waited until the cameras and microphones were off to say: "We knew, but …"
"But what? Nobody must make any waves, and above all not let the public know. Only the elite must know, only those of the elite know how to hold their tongues."
In response to why she had not complained to the police at the time, Banon writes: "Put yourself in my place."
It was widely reported that Banon's mother, Anne Mansouret – a Socialist politician – had dissuaded her daughter from going to the police, telling her she would be known for the rest of her life as "the girl who had a problem with the politician".
Banon wrote that her decision in June to make an official complaint for "attempted rape" was "taking the combat to the enemy".
In the book, published on Thursday, she also expresses shock that supporters have abandoned her.
"How many promised to give evidence if, in future, they were called to do so? How many assured me of unwavering support?
"How many suddenly disappeared the moment they were asked to sign a written declaration, when they had to photocopy their identity card to authenticate the statement?"

Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/oct/13/dominique-strauss-kahn-inquiry-dropped

Sunday, 9 October 2011

French socialists’ primary race catches public eye

PARIS: It was billed as a fight to the death between egotists: a savage war of vengeful ex-partners, secret pacts, crash-diets and televised slanging matches.
But the French Socialist primary race to choose a leftwing challenger to Nicolas Sarkozy in next year`s presidential election has surprised the nation. The battle has been polite and focused. And, crucially, it also appears to have caught the public imagination – the first live TV debate got better ratings than the country`s hit version of reality cookery show MasterChef.
Francois Hollande, the wise-cracking rural MP and self-styled “Mr Normal”, is favourite to win the first round vote on Sunday. But because the party is making history with an open ballot that allows anyone on the electoral register to have a say – if they pay a euro and sign allegiance to the left – commentators are wary of pre-judging the outcome.
The French left is on a high. It has just won control of the senate for the first time in modern history and polls predict a Socialist win against the beleaguered Sarkozy, whose party and inner circle have been badly damaged by sleaze investigations. But the Socialists, who haven`t won a presidential election since Francois Mitterrand in 1988, are wary of poll leads and know how often power has eluded them at the ballot box.
Hollande, 57, who calls himself the “ordinary guy”, is MP for Correze in south central France and was Socialist party leader until 2008. He has undergone something of a metamorphosis, shedding 15kg and changing from dull portly joker to streamlined, perma-tanned man of ambition who drinks diet coke and rides a moped.
In polls, French voters say he is the most presidential of the six candidates and the most likely to beat Sarkozy. He has said that if the Socialists don`t win the 2012 presidential election the party will die.
Broadly centre-left, his two big themes are major reform of the tax system and stimulation that will provide jobs for France`s depressed, unemployed youth. Unemployment among young people in the country currently stands at around 20 per cent. “The next president has to be someone who inspires confidence. Confidence is the word,” he told his final rally in Toulouse this week.
Behind Hollande in the polls is Martine Aubry, 60, the mayor of Lille. The most recent leader of the party and architect of France`s 35-hour week, she has been portrayed as an “Angela Merkel of the left”, running a broad campaign on social rights emphasising housing, health and education.
Firmly on the left of the party, the former minister has been described as a technocrat and policy-wonk versus Hollande`s political animal. But this week she hit back at Hollande`s consensus-style, centrist politics saying a “soft left” would not beat the “hard right” in France.
Hollande and Aubry share similar ideas on tax reform, shrinking public debt and boosting growth and employment to save the French economy. Before the contest started French voters did not appear to trust the left to deal with the world financial crisis. But a poll this week for business magazine Challenges found people would trust Hollande or Aubry more than Sarkozy if faced with a financial crisis of the magnitude of 2008.
Segolene Royal, the failed candidate in the last presidential election, Hollande`s former partner and mother of his four children, had been predicted to take third place. But she is facing competition from the young outsider Arnaud Montebourg, a lawyer and MP in eastern France whose agenda focuses on anti-globalisation and cracking down on speculation by banks. Another outsider, Manuel Valls, an MP and mayor in the Paris suburbs, is considered to be on the right of the party and has pushed a hard line on spending cuts to tackle France`s public deficit.
The Socialist race was thrown wide open in May when the one-time favourite Dominique Strauss-Kahn was arrested in New York on charges of attempting to rape a hotel maid. The criminal case against him was dropped but his presidential hopes for 2012 are over; he still faces a civil case in New York and another accusation of attempted rape in France.
If no clear winner emerges on Sunday, a second round run-off between two candidates will take place a week later.— Dawn/ Guardian News Service
Source: http://www.dawn.com/2011/10/09/french-socialists-primary-race-catches-public-eye.html