Former French President Sarkozy, begins his Jail-Term Journey over illegal Campaign Financing

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Once hailed as the energetic face of a modern France, Nicolas Sarkozy now finds himself behind the walls of La Santé prison alone in a nine-square-meter cell. The former president, who led France from 2007 to 2012, has begun serving a five-year sentence for conspiring to illegally finance his 2007 election campaign, a case entangled with the late Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi.

It is a scene almost unthinkable in the annals of French politics. Not since Philippe Pétain’s postwar treason trial or King Louis XVI’s fall from grace has a French head of state been imprisoned. Sarkozy, now 70, insists he has been wronged, denying that he ever received Libyan cash and framing his conviction as the result of political vengeance. Still, the court ruled that the exceptional seriousness of the facts demanded imprisonment, despite his ongoing appeal.

The social dimension of this drama is impossible to ignore. Supporters have gathered outside the Paris prison, while his son Louis has urged the nation to show solidarity. Inside the corridors of power, even President Emmanuel Macron and Justice Minister Gérald Darmanin who were once close to Sarkozy, have acknowledged the human-weight of the moment, stressing both the need for dignity and the integrity of France’s justice system.

Sarkozy has been placed in isolation for his safety, far from the cameras that once followed his every movement. Yet, the shadows of ambition and loyalty linger. His former aide, who was his intermediary, Ziad Takieddine, died mysteriously just before the verdict. This was a final twist in a saga that blends money, politics and moral reckoning.

Sarkozy in his own word, reportedly told some friends – “I am not afraid of prison. I will keep my dignity”. To a man who once strode the world stage beside presidents and popes, the contrast of the present circumstance could not be starker. His story, which is partly sociotragedy and partly a cautionary tale, reminds France and other world powers that power might be dazzling, yet never beyond accountability.

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