1. Skip to content
  2. Skip to main menu
  3. Skip to more DW sites

Homecoming for Strauss-Kahn

September 4, 2011

French economist and onetime presidential contender, Dominique Strauss-Kahn has returned to home for the first time in three months. Prosecutors dropped the criminal case against him, but he's not entirely off the hook.

https://p.dw.com/p/12Sk2
Former International Monetary Fund leader Dominique Strauss-Kahn speaks outside the building where he has been living in New York after a hearing at Manhattan state Supreme court Tuesday, Aug. 23, 2011. A New York judge dismissed the sexual assault case against Strauss-Kahn, but the order is on hold until an appeals court rules on his accuser's request for a special prosecutor. (Foto:David Karp/AP/dapd)
His career apparently in tatters, Strauss-Kahn returns homeImage: dapd

Former head of the International Monetary Fund Dominique Strauss-Kahn returned to Paris on Sunday.

Large numbers of police and media were awaiting the erstwhile presidential contender at the airport terminal as he emerged from customs after arriving on an Air France flight from New York.

It is the economist and diplomat's first time in his homeland since the May arrest that ended his tenure as the leader of the IMF and potentially snuffed out hope for a political career.

Political future?

Dominique Strauss-Kahn, right, former head of the International Monetary Fund, and his wife, Anne Sinclair, leave their rented town home on Franklin Street in the Tribeca section of downtown Manhattan, Saturday, Sept. 3, 2011, in New York. Strauss-Kahn was believed to be heading to his native France on Saturday, leaving the United States behind after the collapse of a sexual assault case that cost him his job and possibly his French presidential ambitions. (AP Photo/David Karp)
Strauss-Kahn's former allies are maneuvering away from himImage: AP

In France, members of his Socialist Party have been distancing themselves from Strauss-Kahn ahead of his return. One of five candidates from the party for the Socialist presidential nomination, Martine Aubry, said she thinks "the same way as a lot of women" about Strauss-Kahn's attitude toward women.

Former Prime Minister Michel Rocard, a member of the Socialists, said Strauss-Kahn, who has long had a reputation of being a compulsive womanizer, "visibly has a mental disorder" because of his "difficulties in controlling his instincts." Rocard later apologized for that remark.

Francois Hollande, currently leading the pack of Socialist candidates has spoken vaguely about a position for the him in the election, but without mentioning ministerial positions.

Reasonable doubt

The 62-year-old Strauss-Kahn had spent almost a week in jail, six weeks under house arrest and then was prohibited from leaving the country until New York prosecutors finally dropped the case last week, saying that his accuser had lost credibility.

The hotel maid who had accused Strauss-Kahn of rape, Guinean-immigrant Nafissatou Diallo, had changed her version of the events of the night of the assault and lied about a previous rape.

"We simply no longer have confidence beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant is guilty," prosecutors wrote in a court filing last week.

Strauss-Kahn had resigned from his post as the IMF chief shortly after his arrest and one of his first actions as a free man last week was to visit his former IMF colleagues in Washington DC.

Diallo has lodged a civil case against Strauss-Kahn in a court in New York and in France, writer Tristane Banon has also filed a lawsuit accusing him of attempted rape in 2003. French police are investigating those allegations.

Author: Stuart Tiffen (AFP, AP, dpa, Reuters)

Editor: Sean Sinico