- Charles Pasqua
-
Charles Pasqua (born 18 April 1927) is a French businessman and Gaullist politician. He was Interior Minister from 1986 to 1988, under Jacques Chirac's cohabitation government, and also from 1993 to 1995, under the government of Edouard Balladur. He was first elected deputy of the UDR Gaullist party in 1968, ten years after having founded the Service d'Action Civique (SAC) organisation. Counsellor of Jacques Chirac alongside Marie-France Garaud, he was in charge of the organisation of Chirac's campaign for the 1981 presidential election, won by the candidate of the Socialist Party (PS), François Mitterrand (1981–1995). As such, he is considered to be Chirac's mentor in politics. However, he broke with Chirac before the 1995 presidential election, supporting against him the candidacy of Edouard Balladur for the neo-Gaullist party, the Rally for the Republic (RPR). He created in 1999 the euro-sceptic Rally for France and European Independence (RPF) party and allied himself with Philippe de Villiers's Movement for France (MPF) party for the 1999 European elections. President of the General Council of the Hauts-de-Seine from 1988 to 2004, he broke with de Villiers after his success at these elections, arriving second after the Socialist Party. President of the Union for Europe of the Nations at the European Parliament from 1999 to 2004, he was re-elected Senator of the Hauts-de-Seine in 2004 on the list of the Union for a Popular Movement (UMP, successor to the RPR), a function which he had already held from 1977 to 1986, then from 1988 to 1993, and finally from 1995 to 1999.
Pasqua has been involved in various political scandals, including the Angolagate arms trafficking scandal, involving Pierre Falcone, the Sofremi affair, the Annemasse casino affair, another affair concerning the moving of the headquarters of Alstom company, as well as the Fondation Hamon affair. He has denied receiving money from Saddam Hussein's government during the course of the Oil-for-Food Programme, following the publication of his name in 2004 on the list published by Al Mada. On 27 October 2009, Pasqua was convicted for his role in the illegal arms sales to Angola. He was fined 100,000 euros and received a one year prison sentence.[1]
Contents
Life and political career
Pasqua was born in Grasse, Alpes-Maritimes and has a degree in Law. From 1952 to 1971 he worked for Ricard, a producer of alcoholic beverages (most notably pastis), starting as a salesman.
In 1947 he helped create the section of the Gaullist Party RPF movement for the Alpes-Maritimes.
With Jacques Foccart, he helped create the Service d'Action Civique (SAC) in 1959 to counter the terrorist actions of the OAS during the Algerian War of Independence (1954–1962). The SAC would be charged with the underground actions of the Gaullist movement and participated in the organization of the 30 May 1968 Gaullist counter-demonstration; it was officially dissolved by President Mitterrand in 1982, after the "Auriol massacre" on the night of 18 July 1981 (the five members of the Auriol commando were condemned on 1 May 1985 to sentences between 15 years of prison and life-sentences; however, the mastermind behind inspector Massié's murder was never identified).[2]
From 1968 to 1973, he was deputy to the French National Assembly for the Hauts-de-Seine département for the UDR party, of which he was a leading member from 1974 to 1976. He helped Jacques Chirac to take the lead of the party and participated in its transformation into the Rally for the Republic (RPR).
From 1981 to 1986 he was senator for the Hauts-de-Seine, then president of the RPR group in the Senate.
From 1986 to 1988 he was Interior Minister (in charge of law enforcement). The left-wing opposition claimed, in vain, his resignation after the murder of Malik Oussekine by police, during the demonstration of young against the Devaquet law. He incarnated the "hard wing" of the Neo-Gaullist party, and tried to stop the flight of the RPR voters towards the National Front.
After Chirac's defeat at the 1988 presidential election, he criticized the abandonment of the Gaullist doctrine and the so moderate positions of the RPR. In 1990, he allied with Philippe Séguin and disputed Chirac's leadership. In 1992, he called a vote against the ratification of the Maastricht Treaty.
He became Interior Minister again from 1993 to 1995, and supported the candidacy of Edouard Balladur at the 1995 presidential election. He is mostly remembered for having pushed a series of anti-immigration laws (lois Pasqua), and for his declaration "we will terrorize the terrorists." He expelled CIA agents on charges of economic espionage.[3]
Pasqua distanced himself in 1998 from RPR and Jacques Chirac, arguing that Chirac was not a true heir of Gaullism. He then headed the Rally for France (RPF), a sovereignist (Eurosceptic) party, for a while in association with Philippe de Villiers. At the 1999 European Parliament election, their list got ahead of the RPR list. However, his alliance with de Villiers split.
In 2002 he ran for president, but dropped out after allegedly failing to obtain the 500 representatives' signatures needed to enter the race. Many suspect that he decided not to run because Jean-Marie Le Pen's presence in the election did not leave him enough political space.
In 2003 he was elected a deputy to the European parliament. In 2004, he was elected senator by an electoral college. Many commentators alleged that this senate position, granting parliamentary immunity, was motivated by prosecution closing on Pasqua with respect to corruption practices in the Hauts-de-Seine département.
Charles Pasqua did not run in the 2007 presidential election.
Corruption scandals
See also: Corruption scandals in the Paris regionHe was named in corruption scandals concerning the public housing projects of the Hauts-de-Seine.
In 2004 his name appeared on the list, published by al Mada, of people who allegedly received corruption money from Saddam Hussein's government in Iraq during the course of the Oil-for-Food Program.
Following the publication of the Al Mada article, a US Senate report accused him, along with the British Respect MP, George Galloway, of receiving the right to buy oil under the UN's oil-for-food scheme. Pasqua denied the charges and pointed out that he never met Saddam Hussein, never been to Iraq and never cultivated any political ties with that country. In a lengthy written rebuttal to the Senate report, Charles Pasqua pointed out further that since the oil vouchers were lifted by a legal entity incorporated in a European country, it should be relatively easy for investigators to uncover the masterminds behind the fraud instead of making accusations based on "sensational" press articles.
The investigations concerning the Annemasse casino affair and the move to Saint-Ouen of the headquarter of GEC-Alstom's transport subsidiary were closed in February 2007.[4] In the first affair, which dates back to 1994 while he was Interior Minister of Edouard Balladur, Pasqua was suspected of having delivered an administrative authorization to operate a casino in Annemasse to Robert Feliciaggi in exchange for future political funding. Robert Felliciagi was assassinated in March 2006 in Ajaccio, Corsica. He had resold the casino in 1995, making an important profit.[4] In the second affair concerning Alstom, Etienne Léandri, a friend of Pasqua's, reportedly received an illegal commission of 5.2 million Francs (790,000 euros).[4]
The Sofremi affair is still under investigation. It concerns monies paid between 1993 to 1995 by the Sofremi, a weapons exporter attached the Ministry of Interior, to people close to Pasqua.[4]
Along with André Santini, Pasqua was also the subject of investigations concerning an affair related to the Jean Hamon donation. A wealthy mecene, Jean Hamon, had donated in 2000 to the department of the Hauts-de-Seine 192 works of art, estimated to be worth 192 millions euros. The Hauts-de-Seine, then led by Pasqua, was supposed to create a museum for them in Issy-les-Moulineaux, but the project was abandoned. An investigation was opened in 2003 when a judge based in Versailles asked herself why the Hauts-de-Seine department had paid for the care of these works of art, for a total amount of 800,000 euros, while they were still stored in a castle owned by the billionaire. Since the department continued to pay for a year after Nicolas Sarkozy's take-over of the department's general council, the affair may also involve him.[5] Sarkozy won the 2007 presidential election as the UMP candidate.
Political career
Governmental functions
Minister of Interior : 1986–1988 Minister of State, minister of Interior and Planning : 1993–1995
Electoral mandates
European Parliament
Member of European Parliament : 1999–2004. Elected in 1999.
National Assembly of France
Member of the National Assembly of France for Hauts-de-Seine : 1968–1973.
Senate of France
President of the group of the Rally for the Republic : 1981–1986 (Became minister) / 1988–1993 (Became minister).
Senator of Hauts-de-Seine : 1977–1986 (Became minister in 1986) / Reelected in 1986, but he stays as minister / 1988–1993 (Became minister in 1993) / 1995–1999 (Became member of European Parliament in 1999) / 2004-2011. Elected in 1977, reelected in 1986, 1988, 1995, 2004.
General Council
General councillor of Hauts-de-Seine : 1970–1976 / 1988–2004 (Resignation). Reelected in 1988, 1994, 2001.
President of the General Council of Hauts-de-Seine : 1973–1976 / 1988–2004. Reelected in 1988, 1992, 1994, 1998, 2001.
Municipal Council
Municipal councillor of Neuilly-sur-Seine : 1983–2001. Reelected in 1989, 1995.
See also
References
- ^ Angolagate : un an de prison ferme pour Charles Pasqua, in Le Figaro, 27 October 2009 (French)
- ^ "Un beau travail d'action civique", in Le Canard Enchaîné #4441, 7 December 2005
- ^ CIA 1995–1996 Economic Espionage in France (English)
- ^ a b c d Pasqua : l'étau se resserre, L'Humanité, 21 February 2007 (French)
- ^ Libération, 29 January 2007, "Sarkozy exposé dans une affaire de musée fantôme" available here
External links
- Official page as senator
- US Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations, Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, 12 May 2005, "Report on oil allocations granted to Charles Pasqua & George Galloway"
- Interior Minister Pasqua embodies nation's social divide San Francisco chronicle 21 April 1995 Extract: Pasqua, by contrast, moved from the college of beachcombing to a graduate school degree in peddling booze.
Preceded by
Pierre JoxeMinister of the Interior
1986–1988Succeeded by
Pierre JoxePreceded by
Paul QuilèsMinister of the Interior
1993–1995Succeeded by
Jean-Louis DebréMembers of the Senate of France President: Gérard Larcher Nicolas About · Philippe Adnot · Jean-Paul Alduy · Nicolas Alfonsi · Jacqueline Alquier · Jean-Paul Amoudry · Michèle André · Pierre André · Serge Andreoni · Bernard Angels · Jean-Étienne Antoinette · Alain Anziani · Jean Arthuis · Éliane Assassi · David Assouline · Bertrand Auban · François Autain · Robert Badinter · Denis Badré · Gérard Bailly · Gilbert Barbier · Jean-Michel Baylet · Marie-France Beaufils · René Beaumont · Michel Bécot · Jean-Pierre Bel · Claude Belot · Claude Bérit-Débat · Pierre Bernard-Reymond · Jacques Berthou · Jean Besson · Laurent Béteille · Joël Billard · Michel Billout · Claude Biwer · Jean Bizet · Jacques Blanc · Paul Blanc · Marie-Christine Blandin · Maryvonne Blondin · Yannick Bodin · Nicole Bonnefoy · Pierre Bordier · Didier Borotra · Nicole Borvo · Yannick Botrel · Didier Boulaud · Alima Boumediene-Thiery · Joël Bourdin · Martial Bourquin · Bernadette Bourzai · Brigitte Bout · Michel Boutant · Jean Boyer · Dominique Braye · Nicole Bricq · Marie-Thérèse Bruguière · Elie Brun · François-Noël Buffet · Jean-Pierre Caffet · Christian Cambon · Claire-Lise Campion · Jean-Pierre Cantegrit · Jean-Claude Carle · Jean-Louis Carrère · Françoise Cartron · Auguste Cazalet · Bernard Cazeau · Monique Cerisier-ben Guiga · Gérard César · Michel Charasse · Yves Chastan · Alain Chatillon · Jean-Pierre Chauveau · Jacqueline Chevé · Jean-Pierre Chevènement · Marcel-Pierre Cléach · Christian Cointat · Yvon Collin · Gérard Collomb · Pierre-Yves Collombat · Gérard Cornu · Raymond Couderc · Roland Courteau · Jean-Patrick Courtois · Roselle Cros · Philippe Dallier · Jean-Claude Danglot · Philippe Darniche · Serge Dassault · Yves Daudigny · Yves Dauge · Marc Daunis · Annie David · Isabelle Debré · Robert del Picchia · Jean-Pierre Demerliat · Michelle Demessine · Christiane Demontès · Christian Demuynck · Marcel Deneux · Gérard Dériot · Catherine Deroche · Béatrice Descamps · Jean Desessard · Sylvie Desmarescaux · Denis Detcheverry · Yves Détraigne · Évelyne Didier · Muguette Dini · Éric Doligé · Claude Domeizel · Philippe Dominati · Michel Doublet · Daniel Dubois · Alain Dufaut · André Dulait · Catherine Dumas · Ambroise Dupont · Bernadette Dupont · Jean-Léonce Dupont · Josette Durrieu · Louis Duvernois · Marie-Hélène des Esgaulx · Jean-Paul Emorine · Anne-Marie Escoffier · Jean-Claude Etienne · Pierre Fauchon · Alain Fauconnier · Jean Faure · Françoise Férat · André Ferrand · Jean-Luc Fichet · Guy Fischer · Louis-Constant Fleming · Gaston Flosse · François Fortassin · Alain Fouché · Jean-Pierre Fourcade · Bernard Fournier · Jean-Paul Fournier · Jean Francois-Poncet · Christophe Frassa · Jean-Claude Frécon · Bernard Frimat · Yann Gaillard · René Garrec · Joëlle Garriaud-Maylam · Christian Gaudin · Jean-Claude Gaudin · Charles Gautier · Gisèle Gautier · Jacques Gautier · Patrice Gélard · Samia Ghali · Bruno Gilles · Jacques Gillot · Adrien Giraud · Colette Giudicelli · Serge Godard · Jean-Pierre Godefroy · Brigitte Gonthier-Maurin · Nathalie Goulet · Jacqueline Gourault · Alain Gournac · Adrien Gouteyron · Sylvie Goy-Chavent · Francis Grignon · Charles Guené · Jean-Noël Guérini · Michel Guerry · Didier Guillaume · Hubert Haenel · Claude Haut · Françoise Henneron · Pierre Hérisson · Marie-Thérèse Hermange · Edmond Hervé · Odette Herviaux · Gélita Hoarau · Michel Houel · Alain Houpert · Robert Hue · Jean-François Humbert · Christiane Hummel · Benoît Huré · Jean-Jacques Hyest · Soibahaddine Ibrahim · Pierre Jarlier · Annie Jarraud-Vergnolle · Claude Jeannerot · Jean-Jacques Jégou · Sophie Joissains · Jean-Marc Juilhard · Christiane Kammermann · Roger Karoutchi · Fabienne Keller · Ronan Kerdraon · Joseph Kergueris · Bariza Khiari · Virginie Klès · Yves Krattinger · Marie-Agnès Labarre · Philippe Labeyrie · Françoise Laborde · Serge Lagauche · Alain Lambert · Marc Laménie · Élisabeth Lamure · Gérard Larcher · Serge Larcher · André Lardeux · Robert Laufoaulu · Daniel Laurent · Françoise Laurent-Perrigot · Gérard Le Cam · Jean-René Lecerf · Dominique Leclerc · Antoine Lefèvre · Jacques Legendre · Dominique de Legge · Jean-François Le Grand · André Lejeune · Jean-Pierre Leleux · Jacky Le Menn · Claudine Lepage · Philippe Leroy · Raymonde Le Texier · Alain Le Vern · Claude Lise · Christiane Longère · Gérard Longuet · Jean-Louis Lorrain · Simon Loueckhote · Jean-Jacques Lozach · Roland du Luart · Roger Madec · Philippe Madrelle · Michel Magras · Jacques Mahéas · Lucienne Malovry · François Marc · Philippe Marini · Daniel Marsin · Pierre Martin · Jean-Pierre Masseret · Marc Massion · Jean Louis Masson · Josiane Mathon-Poinat · Hervé Maurey · Pierre Mauroy · Jean-François Mayet · Rachel Mazuir · Jean-Luc Mélenchon · Colette Mélot · Jean-Claude Merceron · Michel Mercier · Louis Mermaz · Jacques Mézard · Lucette Michaux-Chevry · Jean-Pierre Michel · Jean Milhau · Alain Milon · Gérard Miquel · Jean-Jacques Mirassou · Aymeri de Montesquiou · Albéric de Montgolfier · Catherine Morin-Desailly · Jacques Muller · Philippe Nachbar · Robert Navarro · Louis Nègre · Renée Nicoux · Mireille Oudit · Jacqueline Panis · Monique Papon · Charles Pasqua · Isabelle Pasquet · Jean-Marc Pastor · Georges Patient · François Patriat · Philippe Paul · Anne-Marie Payet · Daniel Percheron · Jean-Claude Peyronnet · Jackie Pierre · Jean-Jacques Pignard · François Pillet · Xavier Pintat · Louis Pinton · Bernard Piras · Jean-Pierre Plancade · Rémy Pointereau · Christian Poncelet · Ladislas Poniatowski · Hugues Portelli · Roland Povinelli · Yves Pozzo di Borgo · Gisèle Printz · Catherine Procaccia · Jean-Pierre Raffarin · Marcel Rainaud · Henri de Raincourt · Jack Ralite · Daniel Raoul · Paul Raoult · François Rebsamen · André Reichardt · Daniel Reiner · Ivan Renar · Thierry Repentin · Bruno Retailleau · Charles Revet · Philippe Richert · Roland Ries · Josselin de Rohan · Roger Romani · Janine Rozier · Michèle San Vicente-Baudrin · Bernard Saugey · Patricia Schillinger · Mireille Schurch · Michel Sergent · Bruno Sido · René-Pierre Signé · Esther Sittler · Daniel Soulage · Jean-Pierre Sueur · Catherine Tasca · Odette Terrade · Michel Teston · René Teulade · Michel Thiollière · Jean-Marc Todeschini · André Trillard · Catherine Troendle · Robert Tropeano · François Trucy · Richard Tuheiava · Alex Türk · Raymond Vall · Jean-Marie Vanlerenberghe · André Vantomme · Alain Vasselle · François Vendasi · Bernard Vera · René Vestri · Jean-Pierre Vial · André Villiers · Jean-Paul Virapoullé · Jean-François Voguet · Dominique Voynet · Richard Yung · François Zocchetto
Categories:- 1927 births
- Living people
- People from Grasse
- Angolagate
- Politicians of the French Fifth Republic
- French people of Corsican descent
- Rally for France MEPs
- MEPs for France 1999–2004
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.