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French arms billionaire Dassault in custody over vote-buying

A week after his parliamentary immunity was lifted, French senator is being questioned by detectives as part of a long-running vote-buying inquiry.

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French billionaire industrialist and senator Serge Dassault has been take into custody in a long-running vote-buying inquiry a week after his parliamentary immunity was lifted, a judicial source has told news agencies, reports RFI.

Dassault, 88, was being questioned in Nanterre, near Paris, on Wednesday morning, suspected of buying votes in the Paris suburb of Corbeil-Essonnes, where he used to be mayor.

Judges suspect him of an extensive vote-buying system that influenced the out come of three local council elections in Corbeil in 2008, 2009 and 2010, which were won either by him or his successor, Jean-Pierre Bechter.

The public administration oversight body, the Council of State, annulled the result of the 2008 poll, judging that it had been "established" that money had been given to voters.

Bechter and two other people have already been charged in connection with the allegations.

Read more of this report from RFI.

Read Mediapart's stories on this affair here and here.