12, November 2020
President Biya’s late sister to be buried Friday 0
The final journey of the coffin that will carry the dead body of President Biya’s 102 years old sister the late Mrs Bidjang Regine Ndonda will begin in Yaoundé, the nation’s capital and end in Mvomeka’a in the South Region of French Cameroun.
Régine Ngonda, who died on October 31, 2020 in Yaounde due to an illness, will be buried on Friday, November 13.
Cameroon Concord News understand her funeral will officially begin today Thursday, November 12, 2020 at 11am with the removal of the body from the Yaoundé General Hospital, followed immediately by a requiem mass at the Saint Albert Parish in Mengon village, at 4pm and a vigil at 8pm.
By Rita Akana
12, November 2020
Corrupt France: Key witness drops claims against Sarkozy in Libya campaign funding scandal 0
A leading witness retracted allegations on Wednesday that former French president Nicolas Sarkozy took millions in cash from Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi to finance his 2007 presidential campaign.
Earlier in the case, French-Lebanese businessman Ziad Takieddine had claimed he delivered suitcases carrying a total of €5 million from Tripoli to Sarkozy’s chief of staff in 2006 and 2007.
Takieddine, 70, who is in Beirut on the run from French justice related to another shady financing affair, released a video saying the instructing magistrate had twisted his words.
“I am saying loud and clear: the magistrate … really wanted to turn it the way he wanted and make me say things that are totally contradictory to what I said,” Takieddine said.
“There was no financing of Sarkozy’s presidential campaign,” he added.
The former president jumped on the first reports of Takieddine’s reversal from BFM TV and Paris Match, saying: “The truth is out at last.”
“For seven and a half years, the investigation has not discovered the slightest proof of any illegal financing whatsoever,” he posted on Facebook.
“The chief accuser recognises his lies,” Sarkozy added. “He never gave me money, there was never illegal financing of my campaign in 2007.”
Sarkozy said he would be instructing his lawyers to seek to dismiss the case against him and sue Takieddine for defamation.
French prosecutors last month said they had placed Sarkozy under formal investigation for “membership in a criminal conspiracy” after more than 40 hours of questioning over four days, prosecutors told AFP.
He was already facing formal investigations for “accepting bribes,” “benefitting from embezzled public funds” and “illegal campaign financing” from 2018.
The October legal moves were seen to increase the chance of a trial for Sarkozy, who was already poised to become the first former French president in the dock on corruption charges.
Prosecutors suspected that Sarkozy and his associates received tens of millions of euros from Gaddafi’s regime to help finance his first election bid.
Litany of legal woes
Sarkozy, who was president from 2007 to 2012, has always denied any wrongdoing.
He has been under pressure since 2012, when the investigative website Mediapart published a document purporting to show that Gaddafi agreed to give Sarkozy up to €50 million ($59 million at current rates).
But four years later, Sarkozy was a driving force behind the 2011 international military invention that drove Gaddafi from power and plunged Libya into civil war.
A trained lawyer, Sarkozy has fought the claims of Libyan funding by citing presidential immunity and arguing there is no legal basis in France for prosecuting someone for misusing funds from a foreign country.
He has faced a litany of legal woes since leaving office, including the Bygmalion Affair – allegations that executives at the Bygmalion public relations firm created fake invoices to mask overspending on Sarkozy’s failed 2012 re-election bid.
In a third case, Sarkozy faces charges of trying to obtain classified information from a judge on an inquiry into claims that he accepted illicit payments from L’Oréal heiress Liliane Bettencourt for his 2007 presidential campaign. Sarkozy was cleared over the Bettencourt allegations in 2013.
(FRANCE 24 with AFP)