Agosta Submarine Scandal

I wonder what’s happening in this case, you will see the stark similarity between Zardari and Sarkozy as both are immune from criminal proceedings due to them being presidents. It is alleged that during the purchase of submarines bribes were paid to Pakistani officials (Zardari) and when the French stopped paying bribe their engineers were killed in Karachi.
Sarkozy allies drawn into Karachi kickbacks affair | World | DAWN.COM

**PARIS: A friend of French President Nicolas Sarkozy was arrested and another placed under investigation on Wednesday over their possible role in a corruption case linked to arms sales and deadly bombing in Pakistan, lawyers and police sources said.

**The development brings the so-called “Karachi Affair” back into the spotlight seven months before a presidential election that polls show Sarkozy would lose if it were to be held today.

Thierry Gaubert, a friend and advisor to Sarkozy for many years, was placed under investigation on suspicion that he carried cash kickbacks from the sale of submarines to Pakistan back to France in suitcases.

Nicolas Baziere, who was a witness to Sarkozy’s wedding with Carla Bruni in 2008, was arrested and being held in police custody over allegations that he received delivery of the kickbacks from Gaubert in Paris.

Both Baziere and Gaubert deny the accusations.

“He disputes anything to do with political financing,” Francois Esclatine, a lawyer for Gaubert, told Reuters.

**Their legal troubles mark a twist in a complex case that aims to determine if a 2002 bomb attack in Karachi in which 11 French workers were killed was reprisal against France over its decision to stop paying commissions to Pakistan in arms sales.
**
It also envelops French politics because judges suspect that kickbacks helped to finance the presidential campaign of Edouard Balladur, a conservative and former prime minister, in 1995.

Baziere was chief of staff for Balladur, who denies the accusations.

Victims’ families have called for Sarkozy — who was budget minister under Balladur and spokesman for his campaign — to answer questions about the kickbacks and an elaborate financial setup allegedly designed to ferry home the money.

**Sarkozy’s office brushed off the accusations in November, 2010, saying they “concerned him in no way”, and the president is immune from prosecution while in office. :smiley:
**
When questioned about the kickbacks in late 2010 Sarkozy erupted at journalists, telling a group in Lisbon that linking him to the case was as absurd as him calling one of them a paedophile without any proof.

“It is clear that if Nicolas Sarkozy was not currently president of the republic, he would be heard because the paths lead to his responsibility,” said Olivier Morice, a lawyer for the victims’ families. – Reuters

Re: Agosta Submarine Scandal

Officials claim seizing Agosta deal report against Zardari | Newspaper | DAWN.COM

**PARIS: Official Pakistani documents detailing how President Asif Ali Zardari allegedly benefited from secret payments connected to the sale of French submarines to Pakistan have been seized as evidence by a magistrate investigating a suspected scam surrounding the deal.

****The documents, revealed here for the first time by a leading French website, Mediapart, allege that the payments to Mr Zardari and others were connected to the sale of three Agosta class submarines by French defence contractor DCN to Pakistan in the 1990s.
**
The deal and the commissions associated with it are at the core of what has become known here as the ‘Karachi affair’, currently the subject of two judicial investigations and which has rocked the political establishment with its potential far-reaching ramifications.

**A key allegation in the affair is that the cancellation of commissions to be paid out was behind a suicide bomb attack in Karachi on May 8, 2002, that left 11 French engineers dead. The Frenchmen were in Pakistan to help build one of the submarines.
**
**Evidence suggests that former president Jacques Chirac decided to order the cancellation of the commissions after it was discovered that they were in part re-routed back to France to fund political activities of Chirac’s principal political rival, Edouard Balladur.
**
**The documents now in possession of Paris-based judge Renaud Van Ruymbeke were found during a French police search in June 2010 of the house of Amir Lodhi, one of the intermediaries involved in securing the Agosta contract. At the time of the raid, Mr Lodhi apparently had copy of a report by the Ehtesab Bureau.
**
Mr Lodhi, 61, the brother of a former Pakistani ambassador to the United Nations, is a close friend of Mr Zardari.

**The raid on Mr Lodhi’s home in Paris was carried out by officers of the national financial investigation division, the DNIF, which wrote a report on the Ehtesab Bureau documents. This report alleges that Mr Zardari received ‘backhanders’ worth 6.9 million euros between October and December of 1994.
**
The report is now among the evidence collected by Van Ruymbeke in his investigations launched last autumn.

Originally written in English, the document was translated by the DNIF investigators and now provides the first clear details about the scale of the payments made to Mr Zardari as well as the channels used, including offshore companies, bank accounts and a British tax haven.

In Islamabad, Farah Naz Ispahani, a media adviser to the president, said she had not seen the report. “I cannot comment on the issue because I did not see the report. At this moment I can’t contact President Zardari to give the official word because he is in Washington meeting President Barack Obama,” she said.

Attempts were made to contact Presidency’s spokesman Farhatullah Babar, who is accompanying the president on the visit to the US, but there was no response.

Re: Agosta Submarine Scandal

This was one of the projects which earned our president his nickname, Mr 10 %. But it would have gone ahead through collaboration between the Naval officers and the government officials, dirty alliances at the expense of the nation. We also need to get to the bottom of these scandals, but oh well Zardari is immune from everything.

‘Bribes and bombs’ scandal returns to haunt Sarkozy - Europe - World - The Independent]('Bribes and bombs' scandal returns to haunt Sarkozy | The Independent | The Independent)

A political scandal is gathering pace over claims that 11 French submarine engineers were murdered in a bomb attack in Karachi seven years ago to punish France for the non-payment of arms contract “commissions” to senior Pakistani officials.

**Lawyers for the French victims’ families believe the attack, allegedly carried out by Islamist terrorists, was in fact part of a web of financial chicanery and political manoeuvring which may yet severely embarrass senior figures, including the French President Nicolas Sarkozy and his Pakistani counterpart Asif Ali Zardari.
**

Two French magistrates investigating the bombing of the engineers’ bus in May 2002 have ruled out the possibility that it was an attack by al-Qa’ida on Western interests. They have told the victims’ families there is “cruel logic” to an alternative explanation. They believe unknown figures in the Pakistani establishment may have fomented the attack in retaliation for the non-payment of part of the €80m (£68m) in sweeteners promised to senior officials when Lahore bought three Agosta 90B submarines from France in 1994.

Documents seized by French police allege that part of these “commissions” – legal under French law at the time – were illegally “kicked back” to help finance the 1995 presidential campaign of the then prime minister, Edouard Balladur. When Jacques Chirac won the election the following spring, it is alleged that he punished his old friend and acolyte for running against him by cancelling the remaining payments to senior Pakistani figures.

M. Chirac’s then defence minister, Charles Millon, confirmed in an interview with Paris Match magazine yesterday that, soon after he took office in 1995, he was ordered to block the Pakistani commissions and all other arms payments on which “retro-commissions”, or kick-backs to France, were suspected. When the €800m submarine sale was negotiated, M. Sarkozy was the budget minister and M. Balladur’s right-hand man. He was also a key figure in the then prime minister’s decision to break with M. Chirac that autumn and run for the presidency the following spring.

There is no direct evidence linking him with either the legal commissions or the alleged illegal kick-backs but, as budget minister, he would have had to sign documents authorising large, untaxed payments to foreign officials.

According to investigation documents leaked to the Agence France Presse news agency, a large part of the €80m was paid out before M. Chirac intervened and had already been “distributed” by the then Pakistani investment minister, Asif Ali Zardari. Mr Zardari, husband of the late prime minister, Benazir Bhutto, is now President.

The legal implications of the affair are unclear but the political implications could be explosive. If clear evidence emerges to link the submarine commissions to the killing of the 11 French engineers and three Pakistanis, there would at the very least be deep embarrassment for M. Balladur, M. Chirac and for President Sarkozy.

When asked about the suspicions of the two French investigating judges, M. Sarkozy flew into a temper. He said any suggestion that the murders were a Pakistani retaliation for non-payment of French commissions was a “fable”. “This is ridiculous. It is grotesque,” he added. “Let’s have some respect for the grief of the victims. Who could believe a fable like that?”

The answer is that the “fable” is being taken seriously by the victims’ families, lawyers and the investigating judges, Marc Trévidic and Yves Jannier. “The al-Qa’ida line of inquiry has been totally abandoned,” said Maître Olivier Morice, a lawyer for seven of the families, after meeting the judges in Cherbourg, where the engineers were based. “This is all linked to the payment of commissions… they were blocked by Jacques Chirac to prevent kick-backs to the presidential campaign of Edouard Balladur. This is turning into a [state scandal].”

On 8 May 2002 – just after M. Chirac won a second term as president – a bomb exploded in Karachi beside a bus transporting French shipyard workers who were assembling one of the Agosta submarines. Fourteen people were killed, including 11 French workers. Both Pakistani and French authorities blamed Islamists close to al-Qa’ida, but it appears that US intelligence agents told Paris at the time that the attack was linked to blocked payments on the submarine contract. A self-confessed militant, Asif Zaheer, was convicted in 2003 of playing a part but his conviction was quashed on appeal last month.

The investigating judges are said to believe that M. Chirac’s re-election convinced figures in Pakistani they would never receive their missing money – hence the timing of the attack.
In a speech at a remembrance service for the dead shipyard workers in Cherbourg in June 2002, President Chirac said France would not surrender to “blackmail” – a word which caused some puzzlement at the time.

**The key figures: 15 years ago and now

**
Edouard Balladur, 80
******THEN Centre-right prime minister in cohabitation with the Socialist president, François Mitterrand. Ran for presidency in 1995 but was knocked out by Chirac in first round. ******ROLE It is alleged in documents seized by French police that his campaign – quite possibly without his knowledge – benefited from illegal kickbacks.
**********NOW Retired.


************Jacques Chirac, 76


THEN Mayor of Paris and leader of the centre-right RPR party. Ran for the presidency in 1995 for the third time and won.
ROLE As president, he ordered the cancellation of the Pakistani “commissions”, allegedly in pique against M Balladur.
******************NOW Retired.


********************Charles Millon, 63


THEN Chirac’s defence minister in 1995.
ROLE Admits he cancelled Pakistani commissions on Chirac’s orders.
**************************NOW Faded from mainstream politics.


****************************Asif Ali Zardari, 53


THEN Minister in government of his wife, Benazir Bhutto, who was murdered in 2007 after she returned to Pakistan.
ROLE Alleged to have “distributed” part of the commissions paid by France, which were legal under French law.
NOW President of Pakistan.

Re: Agosta Submarine Scandal

corruption per sirf humara haq hai kyun ki hum shaheed-e-jahmhoriyat hayn :jhanda: