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Former French President Nicolas Sarkozy imprisoned over Libyan funding case
Paris, 21 October 2025 – Former French President Nicolas Sarkozy was incarcerated on Tuesday at the La Santé prison in Paris, nearly a month after being sentenced to five years in prison for criminal association in connection with the alleged Libyan financing of his 2007 presidential campaign — a historic moment in the French Fifth Republic.
The 70-year-old former head of state arrived at the prison shortly before 9:40 a.m., greeted by shouts from inmates who recognized him. Earlier that morning, Sarkozy had left his home in western Paris accompanied by his wife, Carla Bruni, as supporters gathered chanting “Free Nicolas!” in a final show of solidarity.
Sarkozy, who governed France from 2007 to 2012, was convicted on 25 September 2025 of enabling his closest aides — Claude Guéant and Brice Hortefeux — to open talks with Libyan officials in late 2005, seeking illicit funding from Muammar Gaddafi’s regime. The alleged deal never materialized, but French judges ruled that the attempt itself constituted serious wrongdoing capable of eroding public trust.
Declaring himself innocent, Sarkozy compared his situation to that of Alfred Dreyfus, a 19th-century French officer wrongly convicted of treason. “It is not a former president who is being imprisoned — it is an innocent man,” he wrote on social media platform X before his transfer.
His lawyers filed an appeal for release immediately after his detention, denouncing the decision as a “disgrace.” The Paris court now has two months to decide, although a ruling is expected sooner.
Under strict isolation measures, Sarkozy will spend up to a month in a small cell, allowed only one hour of outdoor exercise per day. Reports suggest he has brought with him two books: a biography of Jesus and “The Count of Monte Cristo”, a novel about an innocent man seeking justice.
The imprisonment of a former French president has sparked national debate. President Emmanuel Macron described his recent meeting with Sarkozy as “normal on a human level,” while insisting on the independence of the judiciary.
Justice Minister Gérald Darmanin, a close ally of Sarkozy, announced his intention to visit the former leader in prison — a move criticized by magistrates’ unions as a potential “interference with judicial independence.”
The case continues to reverberate across France’s political and judicial landscape, marking an unprecedented chapter in modern French democracy.