SHARE
COPY LINK

BUDGET

Former budget minister charged after confession

France's former Budget Minister Jérôme Cahuzac confessed on Tuesday to having hidden €600,000 in a foreign bank account for the last 20 years. He was subsequently charged with the offence of "laundering the proceeds of tax fraud".

Former budget minister charged after confession
Budget Minister Jerome Cahuzac. Photo:Patrick Kovarik/AFP

French Budget Minister Jérôme Cahuzac resigned last month after prosecutors announced a probe into a Swiss bank account he allegedly used to hide assets from the tax authorities.

At his own request, Cahuzac was interviewed by the two French judges in charge of the case on Tuesday afternoon. After admitting to holding foreign bank accounts the ex-minister was charged with "laundering the proceeds of tax fraud".

In a statement released after the hearing, Cahuzac, who had up until today refuted the allegations, describing them as "crazy", issued an apology and said he was 'devastated by guilt'.

The minister, who faces five years in prison and a fine of up to €375,000 said he had been "caught up in a spiral of lies and lost his way."

"I apologize for the damage I have caused to my parliamentary colleagues and my constituents, I wish to convey my sincere and deepest regrets to the French people. I have also disappointed my colleagues, my friends and my family," the former minister and key ally of President François Hollande said.

"I met the two judges today. I confirmed to them the existence of the account. I also told them that I have already instructed that all assets deposited in this account, around €600,000, be transferred to my bank account in Paris.

"It was an indescribable mistake to think that I could avoid confronting a past that I wanted to consider behind me. I will now face this reality with all transparency."

Cahuzac's resignation was described by political commentators as the first crisis of Hollande's presidency, which looks only set to deepen now that the former Socialist Party heavy weight has been charged.

In a statement released shortly after Cahuzac's admission, Hollande said the minister "had committed an inexcusable moral error" by denying the facts.

"The president takes the admissions of Jérôme Cahuzac with great seriousness," the statement added.

Cahuzac's stepped down last month hours after prosecutors announced a full investigation into claims by the Mediapart news website that he had an undeclared account with Swiss bank UBS until 2010.

The prosecutors said they believed Cahuzac was the man heard discussing the alleged account in a taped conversation which the investigative site used to substantiate its report.

Mediapart has reported that Cahuzac held funds in the Swiss account until 2010 and had, in breach of French law, failed to declare the account to the national tax authorities.

According to Mediapart, in the recorded conversation with one of his aides, Cahuzac voices concern about the UBS account coming to light but claims he has "dealt with the matter". Mediapart alleged that the contents of the Swiss account were transferred to Singapore.

Reports that Cahuzac had requested a hearing with the judges was broken by satirical newspaper Le Canard Enchâiné.

According to the newspaper, Cahuzac opened an account at a branch of the establishment Reyl & Co. in Singapore, after closing a first bank account at UBS in Switzerland in the late 2000s.

Member comments

Log in here to leave a comment.
Become a Member to leave a comment.

ECONOMY

Sweden boosts spending on civil defence in spring budget

Sweden is to channel a further 800 million kronor to local government and other organisations to bolster Sweden's civil defence capabilities, the country's finance minister has announced.

Sweden boosts spending on civil defence in spring budget

The new funding, which will go to municipalities, regional government, and other organisations, was announced of part of the country’s spring budget, announced on Tuesday. 

“This will strengthen our ability to resist in both war and peace,” Sweden’s finance minister, Mikael Damberg, said in a press conference. “If the worst happens, it’s important that there is physical protection for the population.” 

The government is channelling 91m kronor towards renovating Sweden’s 65,000 bomb shelters, and will also fund the repair the country’s network of emergency sirens, known as Hesa Fredrik, or Hoarse Fredrik, many of which are currently out of order. 

A bomb shelter in Stockholm. Sweden’s government is spending 800m kronor in its spring budget to boost civil defence. Photo: Anders Wiklund/ TT

Sweden’s Social Democrats are currently ruling on the alternative budget put together by the right-wing opposition, making this spring budget, which makes changes to the autumn budget, unusually important. 

The budget includes extra spending of some 31.4 billion kronor (€299m), with 500m kronor going to extra spending on healthcare,  and 10.3 billion kronor going towards supporting Ukrainian refugees, of which nine billion will come from the aid budget. 

The spring budget also includes the so called “pension guarantee bonus”, or garantitillägg, which will see four billion kronor (€390m) going to those with the lowest pensions. 

The bonus, which was the price the Left Party demanded for letting Magdalena Andersson take her place as prime minister, risks being voted down by the right-wing parties in the parliament. 

SHOW COMMENTS