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CRIME

Ex French president Sarkozy loses bid to have Gaddafi probe halted

French ex-president Nicolas Sarkozy has lost his bid to have the country's supreme court throw out an inquiry into suspected illegal financing of his 2007 election campaign with funds from late Libyan dictator Muammar Gadaffi.

Nicolas Sarkozy leaves a Paris court
Nicolas Sarkozy leaves a Paris court. Photo: Bertrand Guay/AFP

The legal ruling by the Court of Cassation, published on Wednesday, makes a new trial likely for Sarkozy, a former rightwing heavyweight who has faced a litany of legal woes since leaving office in 2012.

In March, he became France’s first postwar president to be sentenced to jail relating to his attempts to secure confidential information from a judge in return for the promise of a plum retirement job.

And in September, judges gave him a one-year prison sentence for illegal financing of his 2012 re-election bid, after his campaign team spent nearly double the legal limit.

Sarkozy, 66, has appealed both rulings, and if they are upheld is unlikely to serve any time behind bars under French sentencing laws – though he could have to wear an electronic ankle bracelet.

In the Libya case, investigators allege he and his associates received tens of millions of euros from Gaddafi’s regime to help finance his election bid.

One of the associates, the French-Lebanese businessman Ziad Takieddine, has said he delivered suitcases carrying a total of €5 million from the Libyan regime to Sarkozy’s chief of staff in 2006 and 2007 – though he later withdrew the claim.

While in office Sarkozy became one of Gaddafi’s closest allies in the West, but in 2011 he was a driving force in the international military invention that drove the Libyan strongman from power.

Sarkozy has denied any wrongdoing.

“I can only regret this ruling, which nonetheless changes nothing with regards to the facts,” his lawyer Emmanuel Piwnica said Wednesday.

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CRIME

French teen dies from heart failure after knife attack near school

A 14-year-old girl has died of a heart attack in eastern France after her school locked down to protect itself from a knife attacker who lightly wounded two other girls, an official said on Friday.

French teen dies from heart failure after knife attack near school

The teenager “was rescued by teachers who were very fast to call the fire department. She died at the end of the afternoon,” education official Olivier Faron said.

The girl’s middle school in the village of Souffelweyersheim closed its doors on Thursday afternoon after a man stabbed two other girls aged 7 and 11 outside a nearby primary facility.

“Sadly this pupil underwent an episode of very high stress that led to a heart attack,” Faron said.

A mother outside the middle school on Friday morning said her son in first year of secondary had also been scared during the lockdown the previous day.

“Whereas in the primary school they made it more like a game, perhaps here it was a little too direct,” Deborah Wendling said.

“He thought there was an armed person in the school. They could hear doors slamming, but in fact it was just other classrooms locking down.”

Faron defended the teachers.

READ ALSO: Schoolgirl threatens teacher with knife as tensions rise in French schools

“There is no perfect solution,” he said.

But “we will analyse in depth what happened. If there are lessons to be taken from this, we will take them.”

The two girls hurt in the attack were discharged from hospital on Thursday evening with only light wounds.

Police have arrested the 30-year-old assailant, and a probe has been opened into “attempted murder of minors”, the prosecutor’s office said.

It was not immediately clear what had motivated him, but it did not appear to be “a terrorist act”, it said.

He was “psychiatrically fragile” and appeared to have stopped his medication.

The incident follows a series of attacks on schoolchildren by their peers, in particularly the fatal beating earlier this month of Shemseddine, 15, outside Paris.

French Prime Minister Gabriel Attal on Thursday announced measures to crack down on teenage violence in and around schools.

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