French election: New claims over Le Pen FN funding Published duration 27 February 2017 Related Topics France elections 2017

image copyright AFP image caption Gael Nofri - a councillor in Nice - accuses the FN of corruption

A former aide to the French far-right presidential candidate, Marine Le Pen, has made new allegations about fraudulent party financing.

Gael Nofri said that in 2012 the National Front (FN) had recruited him into Ms Le Pen's presidential campaign team, using a fictitious European Parliament (EP) contract.

It was apparently a way for the FN to avoid declaring campaign spending.

The FN is already under investigation for alleged misuse of EP funds.

Polls suggest that Ms Le Pen is on course to win the first round of the presidential election in April, but centrist Emmanuel Macron is gaining ground and looks likely to beat her in the May runoff vote.

A Figaro/LCI poll on Sunday put Mr Macron on 58% in the runoff, against 42% for Ms Le Pen.

image copyright Reuters image caption Marine Le Pen says she will not speak to police before the election

Quoted by French media, Mr Nofri said he had signed up to work for Ms Le Pen in September 2011.

"In 2012 I was told: 'there is a problem, we have to do it via a European Parliament contract' - I refused," he said.

Mr Nofri is now a municipal councillor in Nice with the centre-right Republicans party, having severed his links to the FN.

Later in 2012, he said, he was given a contract to work with FN accountant Nicolas Crochet, but he "never set foot" in Mr Crochet's office.

The French news website Mediapart says fraud investigators have found evidence of €4,500 (£3,834; $4,763) in monthly payments to Mr Nofri from 2012, identifying him as a European Parliament assistant to MEP Jean-Marie Le Pen, Marine's father and the former FN leader.

"I was never Jean-Marie Le Pen's assistant," he said.

At least three other FN associates of Marine Le Pen are under French judicial investigation: Catherine Griset, Frederic Chatillon and her bodyguard Thierry Legier.

image copyright Getty Images image caption Anti-FN protesters in Nantes clashed with police on Saturday ahead of a Le Pen rally

image copyright Getty Images image caption Police in full riot gear confronted the protesters in Nantes

She denies wrongdoing and claims that the allegations are a plot to derail her campaign.

One of her election rivals, Republicans' candidate Francois Fillon, is embroiled in a separate financial scandal involving suspicious payments made to his wife and children.

Lorrain de Saint-Affrique, an aide to Jean-Marie Le Pen quoted by Mediapart, insisted that Mr Nofri had indeed worked for Mr Le Pen "as a local assistant".

The European Parliament alleges that more than €300,000 (£257,000; $321,000) of its funding was misspent by the FN.

On Sunday Ms Le Pen addressed a campaign rally in the western city of Nantes, hours after anti-FN demonstrators clashed with police.