Romania's former prime minister Adrian Nastase attempted suicide Wednesday, hours after the Supreme Court threw out his appeal against a two-year jail sentence over corruption. Medical sources said Nastase shot himself in the throat but his lawyer said he was still alive and conscious. "He is OK. He is conscious and has opened his eyes," lawyer Ion Cazacu told journalists. "I saw a man who wants to fight for his life," he added. Mediafax news agency said doctors would operate on Nastase to remove the bullet stuck in his throat. "I hope he will recover," Prime Minister Victor Ponta told journalists after visiting his predecessor in hospital. Romania's former prime minister Adrian Nastase attempted suicide Wednesday, hours after the Supreme Court threw out his appeal against a two-year jail sentence over corruption. Medical sources said Nastase shot himself in the throat but his lawyer said he was still alive and conscious. "He is OK. He is conscious and has opened his eyes," lawyer Ion Cazacu told journalists. "I saw a man who wants to fight for his life," he added. Mediafax news agency said doctors would operate on Nastase to remove the bullet stuck in his throat. "I hope he will recover," Prime Minister Victor Ponta told journalists after visiting his predecessor in hospital. Nastase has always denied the charges against him, insisting he was victim of a "political trial". Having exhausted the last legal recourse in Romania, one of Nastase's lawyers, Lucian Bolcas, told Realitatea TV that his client planned to appeal the verdict at the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg. Nastase is the most senior figure condemned in Romania since the fall of former Communist dictator Nicolae Ceausescu. He is described by analysts as the political mentor of Romania's current Prime Minister Victor Ponta. "This verdict is opening a new era for Romanian justice in which judges are no longer afraid of condemning powerful people," Laura Stefan, an anti-corruption expert for the think tank Expert Forum, told AFP. "It will make politicians think twice when they use their political attributions and the budget they are allocated for their personal interest. This is a very strong warning" against graft at top level, she added. "The verdict marks a very important turning point for the independence and the integrity of the Romanian judiciary," diplomats told AFP. Romania's judiciary has been under close scrutiny from the European Commission since 2007, with Brussels insisting on more efforts to fight high-level corruption in the former Communist country. "I think everything that has been done in the past years to reform the Romanian justice system is now bearing fruit," Stefan stressed. Very few heads of government have been sentenced to jail in Europe on corruption charges. Italy's Bettino Craxi was sentenced in the 1990s to 27 years in prison -- of which nine years and eight months were upheld by appeal courts -- for corruption and the illegal financing of his now defunct party. He fled to Tunisia to escape justice and died in exile in 2000. Nastase is facing two more trials, after prosecutors appealed recent Supreme Court rulings. In December, he was acquitted of corruption in a case involving a suspicious $400,000 inheritance left to his wife. In January, he was sentenced to a three-year suspended jail term for blackmail and cleared of graft. Prosecutors had charged him with receiving some 630,000 euros ($841,000) in bribes from a construction company owner in exchange for appointing her head of the Construction Inspectorate.
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