French Elite Hit by Sleaze Claims |
Publication | BBC News |
Date | 2001-06-18 |
Reporter | Staff Writers |
Web Link | http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/world/europe/newsid_1394000/1394538.stm |
Roland Dumas: Says he has been made a scapegoat
The disgraced French former Foreign Minister, Roland Dumas, has accused
ministers in the current government of involvement in a corruption scandal
surrounding the former state-owned oil giant, Elf.
Dumas, who was found guilty on charges relating to the Elf
scandal last month, said the current foreign and employment ministers were both
implicated in a web of bribes.
He told Le Figaro newspaper he had been made a scapegoat for practices
common under the late President Francois Mitterrand in the 1980s and 1990s for
whom he served.
He said that justice had been selective and that many known cases of misconduct
were deliberately not being investigated.
Leuna affair
The current Employment Minister, Elisabeth Guigou, and Foreign Minister Hubert
Vedrine were, according to Mr Dumas, party to illicit payments at the time made
by Elf to the then German Chancellor Helmut Kohl's Christian Democrat (CDU)
party.
Hubert Vedrine: 'Astonished' by allegations
He claims Elf made illegal donations to the CDU
in order to buy the Leuna oil refinery in East Germany after Mr Kohl made a
personal appeal to then President Mitterrand and Prime Minister Balladur.
Dumas said that former Elf president Loik Le Floch-Prigent's version that he had
discussed the Leuna affair with the president and that Mr Vedrine and Ms Guigou
knew about it, "was certainly true".
"Mitterrand completely endorsed the project, perhaps including the payment
of commissions, because he considered it useful for France,"
he said.
Dumas says he only found out about the affair after he left office.
Mr Vedrine, who at the time was a senior advisor to President Mitterrand, also
says he only knew of the payments afterward.
He responded to the allegations angrily, saying they were "the reactions of
a devastated man".
Ms Guigou, then minister for European affairs, rejected the accusations, saying:
"Roland Dumas appears unable to accept the fact that this government chose
not to intervene in judicial affairs".
Selective justice
Although Dumas' trial involved many prominent figures, including Le
Floch-Prigent, his second-in-command, Alfred Sirven, and Dumas' mistress and
former Elf employee, Christine Deviers-Joncour, it only touched on a small part
of the Elf affair.
Elisabeth Guigou: Dumas says she knew of payments
Dumas was sentenced to six months in prison for
illegally receiving public funds through extravagant gifts which Deviers-Joncour
lavished on him in an attempt to sway his opinion on important contracts.
But a far wider web of corruption is believed to have existed.
Dumas says the judiciary is being deliberately selective in its investigations.
"I have realised that the judiciary does not want to go right to the end of
the road which leads to the truth. There is perhaps partly a wish to protect the
higher interest of the country, but there is also perhaps a wish to protect
those who are still in the driving seat," he said.
Taiwan
As well as accusing the ministers over the Leuna affair, he said he knew who had
received payments from a contract to sell frigates to Taiwan.
He refused to name names, saying he wanted to watch how things developed, but
said that those concerned knew that he knew.
He said that the President Mitterrand had been tricked into agreeing to payments
to push through the contract when the contract had already been concluded.
"A batch of payments, which had no reason to exist, was added onto a
contract which had already been closed, tricking my friends who gave the green
light," he said.
Though Dumas has given one of the most frank accounts of the Elf affair so far,
he hinted that he had even more to reveal.
"[Elf] was one of the cash-cows of the Republic. It served to maintain good
relations with African heads of state and... irrigated certain networks and
financed certain people. It was known. The system had been in place for a very
long time."
With acknowledgment to BBC News.