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Proudgrandson
06-23-2009, 10:18 AM
LONDON: High-ranking Pakistani officials were behind the killing of eleven French ship-building engineers in Karachi seven years ago, two French judges have ruled.

Until now al-Qaida had been blamed for the bomb attack on a bus in 2002 that killed 11 engineers and three Pakistanis.

The judges suspected that the Pakistanis were retaliating over a decision by former French President Jacques Chirac, to halt payment to Pakistani officers of millions of pounds in secret commission from an 720 million pounds contract signed in 1994, for three French submarines, the Time reported on Tuesday.

The dead engineers were working on the submarine contract for DCN, the French naval shipbuilding enterprise.

Some of the money was kicked back to France to finance the 1995 presidential campaign of Edouard Balladur, Chirac's Prime Minister and rival, according to claims disclosed by the judges.

The chief of Balladur's unsuccessful campaign that year was Nicolas Sarkozy, who was then the Budget Minister.

According to media reports, the French secret service retaliated after the 2002 attack, breaking the legs of two Pakistan navy admirals and killing a lower-ranking officer.

Sarkozy, now the President of France, has dismissed as "a fable" the suspicions of the judges, Marc Trevidic and Yves Janier.

"This is ridiculous... grotesque," Sarkozy said. "Who would believe such a tale," Balladur said that everything about the submarine deal had been "completely regular".

The judges, however, told the surviving victims and their relatives that they have uncovered a trail that tied the bombing to Pakistani officials.

Investigators have also seized documents describing a web of offshore companies created to channel the commission payments, the judges said.

.........

From the Times of India today.......very big pinch of salt??

pg_ord
06-23-2009, 10:54 AM
Repost ... original from Le Monde.....
http://militaryphotos.net/forums/showthread.php?t=159413&highlight=french+agosta

From ******* as well
http://in.*******.com/article/domesticNews/idINLJ3620920090619?pageNumber=1&virtualBrandChannel=0&sp=true

By Thierry Leveque
PARIS, June 19 (*******) - French magistrates investigating an attack in Pakistan blamed on Islamist militants that killed 11 French nationals in 2002 are looking into allegations it was linked to corrupt deals, lawyers for the victims' families said.
A coach carrying French naval engineers and technicians was bombed as it left a hotel in Karachi in May 2002. The attack killed 14 people in total.
Pakistani authorities at first blamed Islamist militants and two men were sentenced to death for taking part in the attacks, but their convictions were overturned on appeal in 2003.


The lawyers said Trevidic and Jannier had told them they were looking into allegations that the attack was a retaliation against France from unnamed Pakistani officials over bribes linked to a defence contract that were promised but never paid.
"The investigating magistrates told us that they believed this scenario was extremely credible," lawyer Olivier Morice told reporters.

I guess the french will just have to suck it up and move on to selling some more toys ... this being recession time and all.:roll:

Scriptable
06-23-2009, 08:04 PM
Fu[king scum. I hope the French deal some serious payback.

raoul volfoni
06-24-2009, 09:02 AM
According to media reports, the French secret service retaliated after the 2002 attack, breaking the legs of two Pakistan navy admirals and killing a lower-ranking officer.

Don't you wish sometimes you'd be part of a team asked to do that :D

Anyway a few broken legs and a "lower-ranking officer" 's death isn't a very big retaliation for killing 11 people...

Lala_Peace
06-24-2009, 10:19 AM
We have a saying - Don't feed milk to a poisonous snake. Hope western Govt. understand.

Ordie
06-24-2009, 12:55 PM
There's something about French naval sales and kickbacks that equates to murder.

A similar thing happened in Taiwan involving kickbacks and the sales of frigates.

Bitogno
06-24-2009, 12:56 PM
According to French newspaper Le Monde ( http://www.lemonde.fr/societe/article/2009/06/24/attentat-de-karachi-millon-admet-avoir-bloque-des-commissions_1210994_3224.html ) former French minister of defence recognised he stopped the commissions due to the possibility of retrocommissions.