Egypt extradited Frenchman Christophe Naudin to the Dominican Republic on Thursday for his alleged involvement in the escape of two pilots jailed in a drugs case dubbed "Air Cocaine".
Naudin, a criminologist and aviation security expert who was arrested in Cairo on February 4, is wanted in the Caribbean nation on suspicion of helping pilots Pascal Fauret and Bruno Odos flee to France in October after they had been sentenced to 20 years in prison for trafficking.
The pair, who have always maintained their innocence, were arrested in March 2013 as they were about to depart from Punta Cana in a private jet found to be carrying 680 kilos (1,500 pounds) of cocaine.
Convicted of drug trafficking in August, they were released pending appeal but barred from leaving the Caribbean nation.
They somehow managed to flee and return to France, vowing to clear their names, but were rearrested in November near the French city of Lyon.
On February 11, an appeals court in the Dominican Republic upheld 20-year prison sentences for the two pilots.
Paris has ruled out the possibility of extraditing them.
But France's foreign ministry on Thursday said Naudin had been extradited.
"France has done everything it could to support Naudin," a statement said. "Our embassy in Santo Domingo is following the situation closely and is ready to provide consular assistance."
Naudin's wife Michele told AFP that his plane was en route to the Dominican Republic via New York.
"The Dominican Republic has already said he will be convicted. We know that there is no justice there, and France knows this, yet it let him leave" Egypt, she said.
An Egyptian interior ministry official confirmed that Naudin's extradition flight had departed.
The affair has prompted keen interest in France, after Interpol in November issued arrest warrants for Fauret and Odos, as well as a far-right member of the European Parliament accused of involvement.
Olivier Cadic, France's senator representing overseas nationals, called Naudin's extradition "very bad news for our country".
"There is real concern at how France has managed this affair," he told AFP.
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