French ex-minister offers resignation from Paris cultural hub over Epstein links: letter
World
By
AFP
| Feb 07, 2026
Former French culture minister Jack Lang offered his resignation Saturday from his role as head of a prestigious Paris cultural centre over his links to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, in a letter to the foreign minister seen by AFP.
Lang, who has headed the Arab World Institute (IMA) since 2013, is the most high-profile public figure in France caught up in the latest release of private messages from the paedophile New York businessman.
"I offer to submit my resignation" at the next board meeting, the 86-year-old wrote in a letter to Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Barrot on the eve of his summons to the foreign ministry.
His resignation offer came after French prosecutors announced on Friday that they had opened a preliminary case against him and his daughter, Caroline, over "laundering of aggravated tax-fraud proceeds," following their mention in files related to Epstein.
Barrot told reporters he had taken note of Lang's offer and planned to launch the process to name an interim president of the IMA.
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Before he offered his resignation, Lang told AFP on Saturday that the accusations against him were "baseless" and that he welcomed the probe.
"It will bring much light on to the accusations that are questioning my probity and my honour," said Lang, whose name appears more than 670 times in the released documents.
The 86-year-old has denied any wrong-doing, saying he was "shocked" that his name appeared in the statutes of the offshore company in 2016 and that he had only appealed to Epstein as a philanthropist.
His daughter, Caroline, has already resigned from her job as head of the Union of Independent Producers (SPI), which represents independent film producers in France.
A mere mention in the files does not imply wrongdoing.