Europe fought to retain leadership of the IMF to help tackle its debt crisis as emerging nations launched a sharp counter-attack, saying it was time rising economies took the helm.With the ink barely dry on Dominique Strauss-Kahn’s letter of resignation from a New York jail cell, European powers claimed the top job at the world’s lender of last resort on the grounds of being the IMF’s biggest contributor. As nations sought to agree on a name, French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde emerged as a top contender, in what would be a first for a woman.But signalling the global shift in economic power, Asian and Latin American countries and even former Soviet republics pressed strongly for an end to the post-World War II convention that the job be held by a European. “The times are over when this important job was reserved for a European,” said Brazil’s Finance Minister Guido Mantegna.A spokeswoman for European Commission president Jose Manuel Barroso said that “consultations will intensify about this succession and indeed about putting forward a strong European candidate to take up the position.”While several names were in the hat, including the outgoing head of the European Central Bank, Jean-Claude Trichet, 52-year-old Lagarde, French finance minister since 2007, had been tipped as a possible successor to Strauss-Kahn even before his current troubles.“One figure whose name comes up in discussions is Christine Lagarde and I must say I am very impressed by her,” Sweden’s Finance Minister Anders Borg told national radio. “She has influence and experience.”Commending her as ‘a driving force’ in Europe’s battle against the euro crisis, and “very important” in tackling global financial woes, Borg added that being a woman could be a plus. “Women are half of the world’s population and one can imagine that the competence and influence of women can play a role in this context,” he said. Dutch central bank director Nout Wellink favoured Trichet, whose ECB mandate ends in October, dubbing the 68-year-old Frenchman a “fantastic candidate.” Germany, whose Chancellor Angela Merkel too has called for Europe to keep the IMF job, has offered no candidates of its own for the moment but is believed to be favourable to Lagarde, according to press reports.Britain appears to have dismissed any idea of backing former premier Gordon Brown and a highly-placed European official this week said London considered Lagarde “certainly a credible candidate.” EU partners were “waiting to see if (French President Nicolas) Sarkozy will put her forward,” added the official, who asked not to be named. France has provided four of the 11 IMF chiefs, since the institution was set up at the end of World War II and that may prove Lagarde’s biggest drawback. Lagarde is also facing a judicial investigation on whether she abused her ministerial power in playing a role in a case resulting in a substantial payment to controversial French businessman, Bernard Tapie. Other possible candidates from Europe include former German central banker Axel Weber, although Berlin has yet officially to offer its backing. Meanwhile, emerging powers are stepping loudly into the fray, saying it is time for Europe and the United States to reconsider the arrangement whereby they share leadership at the IMF and World Bank between them.China, South Korea and Thailand called for the new head to come from an emerging economy, and Japan said the new IMF head should be chosen in an “open, transparent” way. As Argentina, Mexico and South Africa too demanded a voice for the emerging economies, 12 former Soviet republics backed Kazakhstan central bank chief, Grigory Marchenko, for the job. Other candidates from emerging economies include Turkish former UN official Kemal Dervis, Indian planner Montek Singh Ahluwalia and Mexican central banker Agustin Carstens. “The make-up of top management should better reflect changes in the global economic structure and better represent emerging markets,” said China’s central bank chief Zhou Xiaochuan.Asked in Brussels whether the EU would favour a candidate such as Turkey’s Dervis, Barroso’s spokeswoman insisted the 27-nation bloc needed to find its own candidate. “We believe we can identify a strong candidate in the midst of the EU,” she said.