IMF chief to fight sex assault charges

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CHARGED WITH ATTEMPTED RAPE: Strauss-Kahn (centre) is taken out of a police station in New York. — AFP photo

News of arrest leaves international body reeling ahead of talks on fallout of debt crisis sweeping Europe

NEW YORK: IMF chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn was due to appear before a judge yesterday as he fought charges of attempting to rape a hotel chambermaid, a scandal likely to end his dream of becoming France’s president.

The veteran French politician, ignominiously led away from a New York police station in handcuffs, will defend himself against claims that he imprisoned the maid in a luxury Manhattan hotel before sexually assaulting her, his lawyer Benjamin Brafman told reporters.

The woman, employed for the past three years at the luxury Sofitel hotel near Times Square, picked Strauss-Kahn out of a line-up Sunday, as police said they had won a warrant to seek DNA evidence on his clothes.

“He intends to vigorously defend these charges and denies any wrongdoing,” Brafman said outside the courthouse where the IMF chief was to appear yesterday.

The bombshell news of the arrest of one of the world’s most powerful men has left the International Monetary Fund reeling, ahead of critical talks on the fallout of the debt crisis sweeping the euro zone.

Strauss-Kahn, 62, has hired a barrage of top lawyers, as questions swirled over whether he could escape prosecution.

But late Sunday, a New York police spokesman said the IMF chief did not have the right to diplomatic immunity.

Another lawyer William Taylor told journalists outside a Manhattan courthouse that the arraignment was postponed until yesterday so Strauss-Kahn could undergo further testing by police.

“Our client willingly consented to a scientific and forensic examination,” Taylor said, adding the IMF chief was “tired but he’s fine.”

A former French finance minister, Strauss-Kahn had been expected to throw his hat into the ring for the 2012 French election, challenging President Nicolas Sarkozy.

But his political ambitions look to be in tatters, after he was yanked off an Air France flight on Saturday just minutes before take-off.

“As we wait for truth to be sorted from falsehood, one thing is already certain: Dominique Strauss-Kahn will not be the next president of the French Republic,” France’s right-leaning Le Figaro wrote in an editorial.

Commentators also warned about the impact on the IMF itself with the Financial Times saying it threatened to undermine Europe’s influence within the body at a time when the euro single currency is in crisis.

“It may well force the organisation’s members to confront wider issues of European influence over the fund, even as it prepares to extend more rescue loans to western Europe,” said the daily.

A police spokesman said that Strauss-Kahn had been charged with a “criminal sexual act, unlawful imprisonment, and attempted rape” of a 32-year-old woman.

The woman, according to media reports, came to the United States from Guinea, alleged he had assaulted her in his suite when he got out of his shower naked.

“She was in the room. She thought it was empty. That’s when he approached her from behind and touched her inappropriately. He forced her to perform a sexual act on him,” a police spokesman told AFP.

He described the victim as “female, black, 32-years-old,” but could not confirm details given in the New York Times that the IMF chief pulled her into the bedroom and onto the bed and then locked the door.

She managed to fight him off, but he dragged her down the hallway to the bathroom, where he sexually assaulted her a second time, the daily said.

MSNBC television said that in the bathroom, Strauss-Kahn forced the maid to perform oral sex on him and tried to remove her underwear.

Strauss-Kahn’s wife, former top French television journalist Anne Sinclair, said she did not believe the allegations against her husband and called for “decency and restraint”.

“I do not believe for one second the accusations brought against my husband. I have no doubt his innocence will be established,” she told AFP.

Strauss-Kahn, widely praised for his stewardship of the IMF, is so well known in France he is often referred to simply as DSK.

Even though he has not yet declared his candidacy in next year’s French president elections, he had been topping the polls.

News of his arrest threw the Socialist party into disarray, and could prove a boost for Sarkozy and his rightwing UMP which is also facing a challenge from the far-right National Front and its leader Marine Le Pen.

Strauss-Kahn’s arrest had an immediate affect on the markets, with the euro falling half a cent in opening Asian trade Monday as markets fretted that the talks on Greece’s debt crisis would be thrown into disarray.

Strauss-Kahn had been due to meet with German Chancellor Angela Merkel in Berlin on Sunday to discuss an aid package for Greece. He was then to attend a meeting of EU finance ministers yesterday and today in Brussels.

It is not the first time that Strauss-Kahn has been tainted by scandal. In 2008, he was discovered to be having an affair with an Hungarian IMF economist, but the IMF concluded he had not exerted pressure on the woman, although it noted his inappropriate behaviour. — AFP