Hollande defensive as tax fraud rocks French govt
BY Agencies4 April 2013 8:32 AM IST
Agencies4 April 2013 8:32 AM IST
France’s embattled government was forced to go on the defensive over an explosive tax fraud scandal involving a former budget minister, as critics questioned how much President Francois Hollande knew. Jerome Cahuzac, once responsible for cracking down on tax evasion, was charged on Tuesday with ‘laundering the proceeds of tax fraud’ after admitting having a foreign bank account, an allegation he had until then denied.
Hollande was quick to condemn the ex-minister -- who resigned last month after prosecutors opened a probe into the account, first revealed by the investigative Mediapart news website -- but critics demanded to know if he was aware of the account. On Wednesday, the head of the main opposition right-wing UMP party Jean-Francois Cope said Hollande had either showed ‘naivety’ or he had ‘lied.’
Either the president ‘knew nothing and that’s extremely serious because it means that he showed a certain amount of naivety, either he knew and that means he lied to the French people,’ Cope said on radio station Europe 1.
But Najat Vallaud-Belkacem, spokeswoman for the government, countered that neither Hollande nor Prime Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault -- ‘unaware of course' of the account -- ‘have to be responsible for the lie in which a man isolated himself.’
She said on Europe 1 that both had asked Cahuzac about the allegations, who had said he was ‘unaware of anything.’ The former budget minister’s lawyer admitted that his bank account, originally opened in Switzerland, had been transferred to Singapore in 2009 and that the amount laundered was equivalent to about 30,000 euros ($38,400).
Hollande was quick to condemn the ex-minister -- who resigned last month after prosecutors opened a probe into the account, first revealed by the investigative Mediapart news website -- but critics demanded to know if he was aware of the account. On Wednesday, the head of the main opposition right-wing UMP party Jean-Francois Cope said Hollande had either showed ‘naivety’ or he had ‘lied.’
Either the president ‘knew nothing and that’s extremely serious because it means that he showed a certain amount of naivety, either he knew and that means he lied to the French people,’ Cope said on radio station Europe 1.
But Najat Vallaud-Belkacem, spokeswoman for the government, countered that neither Hollande nor Prime Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault -- ‘unaware of course' of the account -- ‘have to be responsible for the lie in which a man isolated himself.’
She said on Europe 1 that both had asked Cahuzac about the allegations, who had said he was ‘unaware of anything.’ The former budget minister’s lawyer admitted that his bank account, originally opened in Switzerland, had been transferred to Singapore in 2009 and that the amount laundered was equivalent to about 30,000 euros ($38,400).
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