Wall Street Journal is reporting that the bombing of 11 french submarine engineers may have to do with kickbacks to dealmakers not being paid.
French Bombing Inquiry Takes a New Turn - WSJ.com
Sarkozy (the french president) has denied it, but the Wall Street Journal telling the story.
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PARIS -- Prosecutors investigating a 2002 bombing in Pakistan that killed 11 French citizens are taking their probe in a new direction, looking into whether the attack was retaliation for a failure to pay alleged bribes, according to a lawyer and people close to the probe.
Prosecutors are also looking into whether the arrangement involved planned kickbacks to the campaign of a French prime minister who was running for president.
[Pakistan Bombing photo] Agence France-Presse/Getty Images
The 2002 wreckage of a bus in which 14 people were killed in Pakistan, including 11 French citizens. Prosecutors are probing whether the incident was linked to a failure to pay alleged bribes.
For the past seven years, French investigators have suspected that Islamic terrorists were behind the bombing of a bus carrying employees of French state-controlled warship maker Direction des Constructions Navales, or DCN, in Karachi.
The blast killed 14 people, including 11 French DCN employees, who were working on the construction of submarines for the Pakistan Navy. France had won a contract to build three submarines in 1994 for 5.5 billion French francs, or about $1 billion at the exchange rate of the time.
This week, Paris-based antiterrorist investigative magistrates informed families of the 11 French victims that they were looking into whether the attack happened because France allegedly reneged on a pledge to pay alleged commissions related to the lucrative submarine-building contract, according to Olivier Morice, a lawyer for the families. The new line of inquiry was also confirmed by people close to the probe.
"There was a terrorist act in which French citizens were killed," Mr. Morice said Friday after a meeting with investigators. "But the motive may be that France did not pay commissions it had pledged to pay."
After examining documents from the time, prosecutors are looking into whether -- as part of the overall submarine contract -- French officials allegedly agreed to pay $33 million to intermediaries who had helped France secure the contract, say Mr. Morice and the people close to the probe.
At the time, such commissions would have been legal: Before France joined an international anticorruption initiative in 2000, it wasn't illegal for French companies to pay commissions to foreign officials to secure contracts overseas. The alleged commissions were supposedly to be paid before 2000.
Investigators are looking into whether part of the money from the commissions was destined to flow back into France to help finance the 1995 presidential bid of then-Prime Minister Edouard Balladur. At the time, Nicolas Sarkozy -- now France's president -- was budget minister and Mr. Balladur's campaign manager.
It would have been illegal for part of the alleged commissions to flow back into France -- a mechanism sometimes known as reverse kickbacks. Prosecutors say they have documents that indicate part of the alleged commission may have been aimed at helping Mr. Balladur's campaign coffers. The prosecutors and investigators say they have no evidence implicating Messrs. Balladur or Sarkozy.
Investigators say they began looking into the new angle after they seized a number of financial documents describing how a web of offshore companies had been created to channel the alleged commission payments, as well as a confidential report written by a former French intelligence officer about the case.
Mr. Balladur ended up losing the presidential election, and investigators are probing whether this prompted French officials not to pay the alleged commissions associated with the submarine deal, according to Mr. Morice and the people familiar with the matter. The bombing may have been the result of these alleged missed payments, these people add.
Investigators are looking into a theory that Islamic terrorists carried out the bombing but on behalf of people who were supposed to receive the alleged commissions, but no evidence has been presented to support this theory.
Officials at DCNS, the new firm formed out of the former DCN, couldn't be reached for comment.
Mr. Sarkozy said Friday that the new angle being pursued by investigators was a "myth." "It is ridiculous," he told reporters on the sidelines of a summit in Brussels.
Mr. Balladur said in a TV interview he had heard "about this story for years" but that according to his information, the submarine export contract was conducted in a "perfectly normal" way
French Bombing Inquiry Takes a New Turn - WSJ.com
Sarkozy (the french president) has denied it, but the Wall Street Journal telling the story.
------------------------------
PARIS -- Prosecutors investigating a 2002 bombing in Pakistan that killed 11 French citizens are taking their probe in a new direction, looking into whether the attack was retaliation for a failure to pay alleged bribes, according to a lawyer and people close to the probe.
Prosecutors are also looking into whether the arrangement involved planned kickbacks to the campaign of a French prime minister who was running for president.
[Pakistan Bombing photo] Agence France-Presse/Getty Images
The 2002 wreckage of a bus in which 14 people were killed in Pakistan, including 11 French citizens. Prosecutors are probing whether the incident was linked to a failure to pay alleged bribes.
For the past seven years, French investigators have suspected that Islamic terrorists were behind the bombing of a bus carrying employees of French state-controlled warship maker Direction des Constructions Navales, or DCN, in Karachi.
The blast killed 14 people, including 11 French DCN employees, who were working on the construction of submarines for the Pakistan Navy. France had won a contract to build three submarines in 1994 for 5.5 billion French francs, or about $1 billion at the exchange rate of the time.
This week, Paris-based antiterrorist investigative magistrates informed families of the 11 French victims that they were looking into whether the attack happened because France allegedly reneged on a pledge to pay alleged commissions related to the lucrative submarine-building contract, according to Olivier Morice, a lawyer for the families. The new line of inquiry was also confirmed by people close to the probe.
"There was a terrorist act in which French citizens were killed," Mr. Morice said Friday after a meeting with investigators. "But the motive may be that France did not pay commissions it had pledged to pay."
After examining documents from the time, prosecutors are looking into whether -- as part of the overall submarine contract -- French officials allegedly agreed to pay $33 million to intermediaries who had helped France secure the contract, say Mr. Morice and the people close to the probe.
At the time, such commissions would have been legal: Before France joined an international anticorruption initiative in 2000, it wasn't illegal for French companies to pay commissions to foreign officials to secure contracts overseas. The alleged commissions were supposedly to be paid before 2000.
Investigators are looking into whether part of the money from the commissions was destined to flow back into France to help finance the 1995 presidential bid of then-Prime Minister Edouard Balladur. At the time, Nicolas Sarkozy -- now France's president -- was budget minister and Mr. Balladur's campaign manager.
It would have been illegal for part of the alleged commissions to flow back into France -- a mechanism sometimes known as reverse kickbacks. Prosecutors say they have documents that indicate part of the alleged commission may have been aimed at helping Mr. Balladur's campaign coffers. The prosecutors and investigators say they have no evidence implicating Messrs. Balladur or Sarkozy.
Investigators say they began looking into the new angle after they seized a number of financial documents describing how a web of offshore companies had been created to channel the alleged commission payments, as well as a confidential report written by a former French intelligence officer about the case.
Mr. Balladur ended up losing the presidential election, and investigators are probing whether this prompted French officials not to pay the alleged commissions associated with the submarine deal, according to Mr. Morice and the people familiar with the matter. The bombing may have been the result of these alleged missed payments, these people add.
Investigators are looking into a theory that Islamic terrorists carried out the bombing but on behalf of people who were supposed to receive the alleged commissions, but no evidence has been presented to support this theory.
Officials at DCNS, the new firm formed out of the former DCN, couldn't be reached for comment.
Mr. Sarkozy said Friday that the new angle being pursued by investigators was a "myth." "It is ridiculous," he told reporters on the sidelines of a summit in Brussels.
Mr. Balladur said in a TV interview he had heard "about this story for years" but that according to his information, the submarine export contract was conducted in a "perfectly normal" way
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