Jean-Charles Marchiani
Jean-Charles Marchiani, (born August 6, 1943) is a French
Intelligence and counter-terrorism
Jean-Charles Marchiani was only 19 when he was recruited by the SDECE, while completing Law school in
Negotiations and hostages crisis
Lebanon hostages crisis
Jean-Charles Marchiani became a national hero in France in 1988, when he managed to free three French civilians, held hostages for three years in Beirut by Hezbollah militias. Despite official intelligence agencies' efforts, diplomats Marcel Carton and Marcel Fonataine, as well as journalist Jean-Paul Kauffmann were kept prisoners for more than three years. Jean-Charles Marchiani held double negotiations with Hezbollah dignitaries in Lebanon as well as with Iranian and Syrian officials. Amongst them, former Iranian-Jewish SAVAK / DGSE agent Manucher Ghorbanifar had been stated to have also accompanied Marchiani during his meetings.[2] He was therefore able to free the three French nationals on May 5, 1988.[3]
Liberation of Air Force pilots in Bosnia
Jean-Charles Marchiani was asked in September 1995 by French president
Political career
Few weeks after the liberation of French pilots in 1996, Jean-Charles Marchiani was appointed by Jacques Chirac to prefect of the Var region (South East).[5]
Along with Charles Pasqua and Philippe de Villiers, Jean-Charles Marchiani was one of the founding members of the RPF (Rassemblement pour la France – Union for France), a right wing party created in 1999. The RPF got 13% of the vote during 1999 European elections, and Jean-Charles Marchiani was elected as European Member of the parliament.[6]
Marchiani has been involved in a serie of politico-judicial cases since the early 2000s, involving former French president Jacques Chirac. These cases are connected with Marchiani's shadow's operations and most of them are under the Secret Defense, which Jean-Charles Marchiani has asked to be lifted for a fair trial.[7] Marchiani was sentenced in 2007 to three years in jail, but was later amnestied by French president Nicolas Sarkozy. In the meantime, French Defence minister Hervé Morin wrote to the judge in charge of the case to ask him to drop the charges against Jean-Charles Marchiani.
References
- ^ L'Express
- ^ "Iskandar Safa and the French Hostage Scandal, February 2002". 2006-02-14. Archived from the original on 14 February 2006.
- ^ Independent
- ^ "How Chirac 'ordered' his own secret, secret service". The Daily Telegraph. Archived from the original on 2018-10-21.
- ISBN 978 291 183 851 4.
- ^ Your MEPs
- ^ The New York Times 2008/12/28