1. Skip to content
  2. Skip to main menu
  3. Skip to more DW sites

'Ghost jobs'

October 30, 2009

Former president of France Jacques Chirac will have to face the courts on charges of embezzlement. Such a move is unprecedented against a former French head of state.

https://p.dw.com/p/KJ8m
FILE - In this June 2008 file photo, former French President Jacques Chirac, seen, during the ceremony to officially launch the "Fondation Chirac."
Jacques Chirac played an integral role in French politics for 40 yearsImage: picture-alliance/dpa

Former French president Jacques Chirac has been ordered to stand trial for embezzlement by a French magistrate.

Chirac, 76, is accused of creating 21 contracts for fake jobs during his tenure as the mayor of Paris between 1977 and 1995.

The contracts were allegedly awarded to Chirac's political allies and paid out of the city's coffers to the tune of 4.5 million euros ($6.68 million).

Chirac was immune from prosecution during the 12 years he was France's president but allegations of corruption surfaced as soon as he stepped down in 2007.

A statement from his office said that Chirac and nine others were charged with the crime, but that he was "calm and determined" to prove that the jobs were not fake.

Popularity on the rise

The allegations come at a time when Chirac is celebrating a renewed popularity among his former constituents. An lfop poll said his approval rating was 76 percent, a stark contrast to that of his successor Nicolas Sarkozy, whose rating was only 44 percent.

Since retiring from politics, Chirac has launched a charitable foundation and written a memoir to be published next month capitalizing on the nostalgia for his administration.

In political circles, the French elite seem to be torn between embarrassment and solidarity.

"These are old stories and, today, Jacques Chirac probably has lots of things on his conscience but at the same time he has given a lot to the country," said Segolene Royal, a former presidential candidate from the Socialist Party, Chirac's political opponents.

"He deserves to be left alone, but justice must be the same for everyone ... Even if he deserves this, it's not good for France's image," she said on Europe 1 radio.

sjt/AFP/Reuters
Editor: Nancy Isenson