Former IMF chief calls charges 'personal nightmare'

24 May, 2011

Ex-IMF managing director Dominique Strauss-Kahn told former colleagues that the sexual assault charges against him were a "personal nightmare" and insisted he would be cleared. In an email dated Sunday and sent to International Monetary Fund staff around the world, a copy of which was obtained by AFP, Strauss-Kahn expressed "profound sadness and frustration" at having had to resign his position to face the charges.
"I deny in the strongest possible terms the allegations which I now face; I am confident that the truth will come out and I will be exonerated," he wrote. "In the meantime, I cannot accept that the Fund -- and you dear colleagues - should in any way have to share my own personal nightmare. So, I had to go." The French politician was arrested on May 14 at New York's JFK airport on allegations by a chambermaid at the luxury Sofitel hotel in Times Square that he attacked her and tried to rape her just hours earlier.

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