Paris:
Nicolas Sarkozy vowed on Monday to sue a website that claimed that Moamer Gaddafi had financed his 2007 Presidential election, seeking to spin the charge in the crucial final week before France goes to the polls.
Right-wing incumbent Mr Sarkozy is slowly clawing back points from Socialist frontrunner Francois Hollande, whose own Presidential bid has been hit by the intrusion of disgraced International Monetary Fund (IMF) Chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn into the campaign.
Both candidates have been appealing to the 18 per cent of voters who chose anti-immigrant candidate Marine Le Pen in the April 22 first round, with Mr Sarkozy riding on the back of the rhetoric inspired by her National Front party.
Mr Sarkozy, on Monday, dismissed as a "crude forgery", a document published by left-wing investigative website Mediapart alleging that the former Libyan dictator agreed to give 50 million euros ($66 million) to Mr Sarkozy's campaign in 2007.
"We will file a suit against Mediapart... this document is a crude forgery, the two people supposed to have sent and received this document have dismissed it," Mr Sarkozy told France 2 television.
Mr Sarkozy and his supporters believe that he is relentlessly targeted by "biased" left-wing media, while the incumbent has repeatedly sought to portray himself as a victim now repenting his perceived "bling bling" style.
"There's a section of the press, of the media, and notably the site in question whose name I refuse to mention, that is prepared to fake documents, shame on those who have exploited them," he said.
Claims that Gaddafi financed Mr Sarkozy's 2007 campaign are not new, but Mediapart's document bearing the signature of Libya's former foreign intelligence Chief Moussa Koussa is something that never came up before.
The letter was addressed to Bashir Saleh, Gaddafi's former Chief of staff and head of Libya's 40-billion-dollar sovereign wealth fund, who is currently a resident of France.
But Saleh's lawyer said that he had "grave reservations" about the document while Mr Koussa, who now lives in Qatar, said: "All these allegations are false."
Mr Hollande said that it was up to judges to decide on the veracity of the Libyan allegations.
"If it's a forged document then the site will be found guilty, if it's not then he (Sarkozy) will have some explaining to do," Mr Hollande said, denying any link to Mediapart which Mr Sarkozy has branded "an agency in the service of the left."
Mr Hollande's team meanwhile sought to play down the re-emergence of one-time Presidential hopeful Mr Strauss-Kahn into the race, after the man known in France as DSK attended a Socialist lawmaker's birthday party in Paris.
MP Julien Dray on Saturday invited senior members of his party to his birthday drinks party at a popular disco bar on the notorious Rue St Denis, a street which has historically been associated with prostitution.
But Dray did not warn his guests that he had invited Strauss-Kahn, who became a toxic figure last year when he was accused of sexual assault in New York and is now under investigation in France over alleged ties to a vice ring.
"He no longer has a role in political life and thus should not be part of a campaign nor in any images that could potentially lead people to believe he's coming back," Mr Hollande said on Sunday.
Mr Hollande's former partner Segolene Royal, who was beaten by Mr Sarkozy in the 2007 Presidential race, said that the former IMF Chief's presence at the party was "inconsequential".
"I at first thought it was a joke. Then I thought that it was in very bad taste," she told BFM-TV, adding that "I left immediately."
"I don't want to meet DSK, given what happened which damaged the dignity of women," Ms Royal said.
An Ipsos poll published on Monday said that Mr Hollande would win Sunday's run-off 53 per cent to 47 per cent, after the Socialist dropped a percentage point to Mr Sarkozy compared to the last poll on April 22.
Nevertheless, 22 per cent of those questioned said that they would go and vote but declined to say for who.
The Ipsos poll said that 54 per cent of far-right candidate Ms Le Pen's voters would go for Mr Sarkozy in the run-off, while 14 per cent of them would vote for Mr Hollande.
Both candidates have a number of major rallies planned for the final week of campaigning, and will face each other on Wednesday in a televised debate that could prove to be Mr Sarkozy's last chance for a breakthrough.
Right-wing incumbent Mr Sarkozy is slowly clawing back points from Socialist frontrunner Francois Hollande, whose own Presidential bid has been hit by the intrusion of disgraced International Monetary Fund (IMF) Chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn into the campaign.
Both candidates have been appealing to the 18 per cent of voters who chose anti-immigrant candidate Marine Le Pen in the April 22 first round, with Mr Sarkozy riding on the back of the rhetoric inspired by her National Front party.
Mr Sarkozy, on Monday, dismissed as a "crude forgery", a document published by left-wing investigative website Mediapart alleging that the former Libyan dictator agreed to give 50 million euros ($66 million) to Mr Sarkozy's campaign in 2007.
"We will file a suit against Mediapart... this document is a crude forgery, the two people supposed to have sent and received this document have dismissed it," Mr Sarkozy told France 2 television.
Mr Sarkozy and his supporters believe that he is relentlessly targeted by "biased" left-wing media, while the incumbent has repeatedly sought to portray himself as a victim now repenting his perceived "bling bling" style.
"There's a section of the press, of the media, and notably the site in question whose name I refuse to mention, that is prepared to fake documents, shame on those who have exploited them," he said.
Claims that Gaddafi financed Mr Sarkozy's 2007 campaign are not new, but Mediapart's document bearing the signature of Libya's former foreign intelligence Chief Moussa Koussa is something that never came up before.
The letter was addressed to Bashir Saleh, Gaddafi's former Chief of staff and head of Libya's 40-billion-dollar sovereign wealth fund, who is currently a resident of France.
But Saleh's lawyer said that he had "grave reservations" about the document while Mr Koussa, who now lives in Qatar, said: "All these allegations are false."
Mr Hollande said that it was up to judges to decide on the veracity of the Libyan allegations.
"If it's a forged document then the site will be found guilty, if it's not then he (Sarkozy) will have some explaining to do," Mr Hollande said, denying any link to Mediapart which Mr Sarkozy has branded "an agency in the service of the left."
Mr Hollande's team meanwhile sought to play down the re-emergence of one-time Presidential hopeful Mr Strauss-Kahn into the race, after the man known in France as DSK attended a Socialist lawmaker's birthday party in Paris.
MP Julien Dray on Saturday invited senior members of his party to his birthday drinks party at a popular disco bar on the notorious Rue St Denis, a street which has historically been associated with prostitution.
But Dray did not warn his guests that he had invited Strauss-Kahn, who became a toxic figure last year when he was accused of sexual assault in New York and is now under investigation in France over alleged ties to a vice ring.
"He no longer has a role in political life and thus should not be part of a campaign nor in any images that could potentially lead people to believe he's coming back," Mr Hollande said on Sunday.
Mr Hollande's former partner Segolene Royal, who was beaten by Mr Sarkozy in the 2007 Presidential race, said that the former IMF Chief's presence at the party was "inconsequential".
"I at first thought it was a joke. Then I thought that it was in very bad taste," she told BFM-TV, adding that "I left immediately."
"I don't want to meet DSK, given what happened which damaged the dignity of women," Ms Royal said.
An Ipsos poll published on Monday said that Mr Hollande would win Sunday's run-off 53 per cent to 47 per cent, after the Socialist dropped a percentage point to Mr Sarkozy compared to the last poll on April 22.
Nevertheless, 22 per cent of those questioned said that they would go and vote but declined to say for who.
The Ipsos poll said that 54 per cent of far-right candidate Ms Le Pen's voters would go for Mr Sarkozy in the run-off, while 14 per cent of them would vote for Mr Hollande.
Both candidates have a number of major rallies planned for the final week of campaigning, and will face each other on Wednesday in a televised debate that could prove to be Mr Sarkozy's last chance for a breakthrough.
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