far-right leader Marine Le Pen has refused to attend a summons by judges over
allegations of misuse of European Union funds, according to her lawyer.
Marcel
Ceccaldi said on Friday Le Pen had told the judges she would not attend before
the end of the presidential campaign, to be held in two stages in April and
May.
"Of
course, she won't go," Ceccaldi said, citing Le Pen's parliamentary
immunity.
A
day earlier, EU politicians lifted Le Pen's EU parliamentary immunity on
Thursday in a separate case involving tweeting pictures of violence by the
Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL, also known as ISIS).
Florian
Philippot, a vice president of Le Pen's National Front Party, told French
broadcaster LCI that Le Pen
"herself requested a judicial investigation be opened more than a
year ago ... and they waited until a year later, the presidential campaign, to
do it".
"It's
a bit much ... so, she'll respond after [the elections]," he said.
'Political interference'
Le
Pen was called in for questioning for wrongfully claiming aides' salaries from
the European Parliament.
She
has already seen her earnings as a member of the European Parliament cut in
connection with the case.
The
far-right leader has denounced the legal proceedings against her as political
interference in the election campaign, where she is the leading candidate.
She
is expected to win the first of the two election rounds, but likely to lose in
a runoff, according to polls, which also show that her legal battles
seem to have little effect on her supporters.
Le
Pen's immunity has been lifted before, in 2013. She was prosecuted in 2015 for
"incitement to discrimination over people's religious beliefs", for
comparing Muslims praying in public to the Nazi occupation of France during
World War II.
Prosecutors
eventually recommended the charges be dropped.
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