THE GUARDIAN: Former head of IMF will face trial and remains under house arrest in New York accused of raping hotel maid
Dominique Strauss Kahn, the former head of the International Monetary Fund, has pleaded not guilty to charges he raped a hotel maid.
The one-time French presidential hopeful will face trial over the allegations that cost him his job and sent the IMF into crisis. He will be back in court on 18 July.
At a brief hearing at Manhattan criminal court he pleaded not guilty in a strong voice, standing between his defence team and watched by his wife, the millionaire former journalist Anne Sinclair.
Strauss-Kahn's lawyers said they needed six weeks to assess evidence that has been collected by the US authorities. DNA matching Strauss-Kahn's has reportedly been found in semen on the maid's clothing and on a section of carpet from his hotel room. Experts say the defence will probably argue that any sexual contact between the maid and Strauss-Kahn was consensual. » | Dominic Rushe in New York | Monday, June 06, 2011
THE GUARDIAN: As the former IMF chief faces charges of violent sexual assault, the rumours about his sex life are swirling around the media. But one woman refuses to believe a word of it – his wife
As Dominique Strauss-Kahn sat in a New York court for a bail hearing, accused of attempting to rape a hotel maid, the focus was on the stomach-churning allegations. One of the world's most powerful men stood charged with locking his hotel suite, dragging an immigrant cleaner from room to room, grabbing and assaulting her, using brute strength to twice force her to give him oral sex, pinning her down and trying to rape her. But one subtle moment in his televised hearing captivated France. After he was granted bail, Strauss-Kahn raised his eyes to his wife sitting in the front row of the public seats, smiled and blew her a kiss. She, a feminist and former political journalist, pressed her lips to the palm of her hand and blew him a kiss back.
What intrigues France about the political rape scandal of the century is that behind it all there is a bizarre and gripping love story. Strauss-Kahn's wife, Anne Sinclair, once the most famous, brilliant and beautiful TV star in France, is still utterly in love with him, her friends say. Locked up in the notorious Rikers Island jail for four days after his arrest, the head of the International Monetary Fund and once the great hope to become Socialist president of France wrote that he loved his wife "more than anything". She said she didn't believe "for a single second" that her husband was guilty.
Sinclair has long been an institution in France: the star French TV interviewer of the 80s – a cross between Terry Wogan, Angela Rippon and Jeremy Paxman – famous for her blue eyes and mohair jumpers. But now, at 62, she has become something much more controversial: France's martyred wife, both a heroine of bravery and object of pity, a potent symbol of women's humiliation not just in the face of French male philandering, but possible sex crime. Celebrity magazines have boosted sales by putting her "smile of suffering" on the cover. Paris Match likened her to Marianne, the woman warrior symbol of France, but "more blind and deaf". » | Angelique Chrisafis | Friday, June 03, 2011