France's Le Pen refuses summons over EU fund misuse allegation: report

Source: Xinhua   2017-03-04 06:46:43

PARIS, March 3 (Xinhua) -- Marine Le Pen, French far-right presidential candidate, on Friday refused to attend a questioning by magistrates investigating into the allegation that she used European parliament fund to pay her party staff, according to local report.

Le Pen, citing her parliamentary immunity, told judges in a letter she will accept to answer their questions over the fake job affair after the two-round election scheduled for April 23 and May 7, news channel BFMTV said.

In December 2016, French prosecutor opened an investigation for breach of trust, organized fraud scams and forgery after the European Anti-Fraud Office accused Le Pen of paying her France-based chief of staff a total of 298,500 euros (316,320 U.S. dollars) for her work as parliamentary assistant between December 2010 and February 2016.

Le Pen is also accused of using European parliament fund to pay her bodyguard 41,554 euros for the October- December 2011 period.

Le Pen, whose presidential bid is gaining momentum, dismissed any wrongdoings and described the affair as "a political plot."

Pollsters say she was likely to win the first round of voting on April 23. However, she would lose the run-off in May to whoever should be her opponent.

In a scenario where moderate conservative Alain Juppe will replace scandal-hit Francois Fillon, Le Pen will be kicked out in first round with Juppe and centrist contender Emmanuel Macron would be the presidential contest's finalists, Odoxa poll showed on Friday. (1 euro = 1.06 U.S. dollars)

Editor: yan
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France's Le Pen refuses summons over EU fund misuse allegation: report

Source: Xinhua 2017-03-04 06:46:43

PARIS, March 3 (Xinhua) -- Marine Le Pen, French far-right presidential candidate, on Friday refused to attend a questioning by magistrates investigating into the allegation that she used European parliament fund to pay her party staff, according to local report.

Le Pen, citing her parliamentary immunity, told judges in a letter she will accept to answer their questions over the fake job affair after the two-round election scheduled for April 23 and May 7, news channel BFMTV said.

In December 2016, French prosecutor opened an investigation for breach of trust, organized fraud scams and forgery after the European Anti-Fraud Office accused Le Pen of paying her France-based chief of staff a total of 298,500 euros (316,320 U.S. dollars) for her work as parliamentary assistant between December 2010 and February 2016.

Le Pen is also accused of using European parliament fund to pay her bodyguard 41,554 euros for the October- December 2011 period.

Le Pen, whose presidential bid is gaining momentum, dismissed any wrongdoings and described the affair as "a political plot."

Pollsters say she was likely to win the first round of voting on April 23. However, she would lose the run-off in May to whoever should be her opponent.

In a scenario where moderate conservative Alain Juppe will replace scandal-hit Francois Fillon, Le Pen will be kicked out in first round with Juppe and centrist contender Emmanuel Macron would be the presidential contest's finalists, Odoxa poll showed on Friday. (1 euro = 1.06 U.S. dollars)

[Editor: huaxia]
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