Three La Santé inmates in custody after Sarkozy taunted in French jail
Three inmates at La Santé prison in Paris were placed in special custody over their involvement in the taunting and threats against Nicolas Sarkozy, who is serving a jail sentence there.
Three inmates at the Paris La Sante prison were placed in special custody, after footage was shared online since Tuesday showing taunts and threats made against former French President Nicolas Sarkozy, who is currently serving a jail sentence there over misuse of funds from Libya.In one of the videos seen by Euronews, the person filming laughs at taunts lobbed at the former French leader, including “Oh Sarko, wake up” and “you killed Gaddafi”.In another clip, an inmate says Sarkozy has “just arrived … he’s going to have a hard time.”“We know everything, we’re going to avenge Gaddafi,” the person said. According to the Paris prosecutor's office, a search was conducted on the premises and two mobile phones were seized.The footage "shows that there is a danger, of course, for the detainee, President Nicolas Sarkozy, and that we must pay particular attention to his conditions of detention," French Justice Minister Gérald Darmanin said on Wednesday evening for CNews channel.The three inmates questioned over the incidents are to appear in court, according to Darmanin. They will either remain in disciplinary quarters or be moved to another prison, he added."We're not going to take any risks," Darmanin emphasised.'Truth will prevail'Sarkozy, who arrived at Le Sante on Tuesday to serve his five-year sentence for conspiring to finance his 2007 election campaign using funds from ousted Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi, has been assigned round-the-clock police protection.Gaddafi was killed by Libyan militants in 2011 after the outbreak of a civil war and a NATO intervention. However, one conspiracy theory has blamed Sarkozy for Gaddafi’s death as part of a corruption cover-up.Sarkozy has contested both the conviction and a judge’s decision to incarcerate him pending appeal. His lawyers said Tuesday that they filed an immediate request for his release.In a show of defiance and while on his way to prison, Sarkozy released a statement on social media declaring that “an innocent man” was being locked up.“I will continue to denounce this judicial scandal," he wrote. "The truth will prevail.”Sarkozy told Le Figaro newspaper that he would bring three books in prison — the maximum allowed — including two tomes of Alexandre Dumas’ The Count of Monte Cristo, in which the hero escapes from an island prison before seeking revenge. He also picked a biography of Jesus Christ.“I’m not afraid of prison. I’ll hold my head high, including in front of the doors of La Santé,” he told La Tribune Dimanche newspaper last week. “I’ll fight until the end.”Sarkozy has repeatedly said he is the victim of “a plot” staged by people linked to the Libyan government and denounced the 25 September verdict as a “scandal”.