Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Dassault says it freely ‘picked’ Reliance, Rahul renews attack

- HT Correspond­ents letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: French plane-maker Dassault Aviation clarified on Thursday that an executive’s reported comment about an “imperative and mandatory” joint venture with Reliance Defence was in reference to the offset part of the government-to government deal between France and India for 36 Rafale aircraft even as Congress president Rahul Gandhi reiterated his demand for a probe into the deal.

Explaining the logic of the joint venture to workers’ representa­tives in 2017, Dassault deputy chief executive officer Loik Segalen said this was done to ensure the French company got the “Rafale India export” business. Hindustan Times pointed out in a report on Thursday it wasn’t clear if Segalen’s reference was to the offsets — the only way Dassault could benefit from these was if it partnered with a local company to make parts it could then source — or the original deal. Dassault clarified that his reference was to the offsets, or components it would have to buy from an Indian manufactur­er.

Separately, Dassault Aviation CEO Eric Trappier told AFP the joint venture with Reliance Group will meet about 10% of the firm’s offset obligation­s required by the contract for 36 Rafale jets.

Gandhi sharpened his attack on the government, calling the Prime Minister a “corrupt person” who came to power “on the promise of fighting corruption”.

At a press conference at the Congress headquarte­rs in New Delhi, Gandhi, who has been unsparing in his criticism of the government over the deal, also termed defence minister Nirmala Sitharaman’s ongoing three-day visit to France as part of a “great cover-up”. The minister is expected to visit Dassault’s Rafale fighter jet manufactur­ing facility outside Paris on Friday.

“One thing is very clear... India’s Prime Minister got the Rafale contract for Anil Ambani’s company (Reliance Defence), and this is not the only contract, some more defence contracts will come. Questions will be raised on the entire defence contracts,” Gandhi said, calling for a probe.

Both the government and Reliance have repeatedly denied such allegation­s.

At its press meet, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) once again rejected Gandhi’s charges of corruption against PM Narendra Modi , accusing the Opposition leader of “lying through his teeth shamelessl­y” and indulging in “politics of misinforma­tion” to build his political career.

“His press conference was full of lies and deception which he is using to build his political career,” BJP spokespers­on Sambit Patra said, according to news agency Press Trust of India.

In its statement, seen as a response to the report by French news website Mediapart that cited Segalen’s remarks, Dassault Aviation reiterated that it had “freely chosen” Anil Ambani’s Reliance Group as an offset partner for the Rafale deal and sold 36 fighters to India within the framework of an intergover­nmental agreement between the two countries.

Dassault is sourcing 50% of the value of the ~59,000-crore purchase in India under the offsets contract. The French company said it had forged a joint venture, Dassault Reliance Aerospace Ltd (DRAL), on February 10, 2017 to execute part of its offset commitment­s.

The French plane-maker said the company also signed partnershi­ps with companies such as BTSL, DEFSYS, Kinetic, Mahindra, Maini and SAMTEL as part of its offset commitment­s. “Other negotiatio­ns are ongoing with a hundred-odd other potential partners,” the firm added.

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