The court ruling that blocked UBS from contesting the plea deal by a former executive is a setback for UBS, as it could lose one of its witnesses during the trial it faces in France.

"We (UBS France SA) take note of the decision of the Investigation Chamber to not admit the bank as a 'partie civile' in the guilty plea proceedings against one of our former employees," UBS said in an email.

"We will appeal this decision."

France and other European Union countries have launched a campaign to encourage taxpayers to come clean on previously undeclared assets held abroad, and clamped down on aggressive tax optimisation techniques by multinational companies.

UBS has disputed the allegations of wrongdoing.

After settlement negotiations failed, French magistrates ordered that UBS stand trial on charges of aggravated tax fraud and money laundering as well as illegally offering related services, a judicial source has said.

French newspaper JDD said UBS had rejected a 1.1 billion euro (982.98 million pounds) settlement proposed by prosecutors.

UBS settled a tax case with German authorities in 2014 for around 300 million euros.

(Reporting by John Miller and Josh Franklin in Zurich and by Maya Nikolaeva in Paris; Editing by Michael Shields)