French opposition in turmoil amid 'plot' over Sarkozy


(MENAFN- The Peninsula) France's former prime minister Francois Fillon yesterday complained of a "plot" against him, amid media revelations he sought to interfere in legal procedures against Nicolas Sarkozy, a rival in the right-wing opposition.

Leading daily Le Monde claimed that Fillon had in June urged President Francois Hollande's chief of staff to push along the several legal complaints against Sarkozy.

"Hit him quickly, hit him quickly ... you know if you don't hit him quickly, you'll see him come back, so do it," Fillon is alleged to have told Jean-Pierre Jouyet, Hollande's right-hand man at the Elysee Palace. Both Fillon and Jouyet have denied this and the former prime minister under Sarkozy's presidency, who hopes to run as the candidate of the right-wing UMP in the 2017 presidential election, hit out in the Journal de Dimanche weekly.

"I can only see in these incredible attacks an attempt at destabilisation and a plot," complained Fillon. He has said he will sue for defamation against two Le Monde reporters, who made the claims in a book, as well as the daily itself. Fillon, Sarkozy and former PM Alain Juppe are the three main UMP candidates likely to run against the embattled Hollande and the high-flying far-right candidate Marine Le Pen in 2017.

The three men used to work closely together. During Sarkozy's presidency, Fillon was prime minister and Juppe was foreign minister. Jouyet, meanwhile, straddles the two camps. Chief of staff to Socialist Hollande, he was a junior minister in Fillon's UMP government.


The Peninsula

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