Jean-Christophe Mitterrand
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Jean-Christophe Mitterrand (born December 19, 1946 in Boulogne-Billancourt) is the son of François Mitterrand, a former French president. He was an advisor to his father on African affairs from 1986 to 1992 [1], and earned the nickname Papamadit (which translates as "Papa-told-me") in Africa.
[edit] Life
Jean-Christophe Mitterrand was a press correspondent for the Agence France Presse in 1975 in Mauritania [1].
[edit] Angolagate
- Further information: Angolagate
In the 1990s he, along with Russian businessman Arcadi Gaydamak, were implicated in Angolagate arms dealing scandal. He was indicted in 1993 by the French justice in this case, suspected of having used his influence to help the arms-dealer Pierre Falcone sell Russian weapons to José Eduardo dos Santos's government. On 22 December 2000, he was imprisoned in the Santé prison in Paris, on orders of the magistrate Philippe Courroye, on charges of "complicity of arms traffic, trafic d'influence [i.e. corruption ] and trafic d'influence aggravé." He was suspected of having received important sums of money in 1993 and 1994 for his role as an intermediary in this contract, and has recognized having received US$ 1,8 million (13 million Francs) from the Brenco on a Swiss bank account — although he denied any participation to an arms deal.
He was freed three weeks later, on 11 January 2001, after that her mother, Danielle Mitterrand, managed to pay a caution of 5 million francs (762,000 euros [1]) [2]. However, he was indicted again on 4 July 2001 on charges of "complicity of arms traffic" by the magistrates Philippe Courroye and Isabelle Prévost-Desprez, following a complaint filed in January 2001 by the Socialist Minister of Defence Alain Richard [3].
He was again indicted on 17 October, 2001 for corruption by the investigative judge Courroye, suspected of having received US$ 300,000 from the Brenco in payment of councils to Falcone. On the eve of this new indictment, he himself had filed a complaint against Courroye accusing of him of having made a "false" document in July 2000 (because Courroye had put the date of 3 July for an ordinance drafted on 5 July) — but this manoeuver did not succeed in cancelling the procedure [2].
According to a financial expertise transmitted in May 2004 to the judge Courroye, Pierre Falcone paid Jean-Christophe Mitterrand 2,2 million euros.
On 13 January, 2006, the Court of Appeal of Paris confirmed the initial sentence. On 27 October, 2006, the Court of Cassation rejected Jean-Christophe Mitterrand's appeal, and confirmed his a 30 months prison sentence on probation, along with a euros 600,000 fine for tax evasion (fraude fiscale) — because of 600,000 euros received from Falcone but not declared to the Fisc tax administration [1].
[edit] References
- ^ a b c d Jean-Christophe Mitterrand joue les victimes, RFI, 16 September 2004 (French)
- ^ a b Jean-Christophe Mitterrand libéré, L'Express, 15 January 2001 (French)
- ^ Chronology of the Angolagate, L'Express, 16 October 2002 (French)