Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Chinese firms

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pany emerges as a shortliste­d bidder only after it meets all technical qualificat­ions. After that, price quotes of all shortliste­d bidders are evaluated and the lowest price bidder gets the contract, the first official said.

An order clarifying the move has already been circulated to all ministries, public sector units and state government­s asking them not to scrap earlier tenders and initiate fresh tendering processes only because of the presence of a Chinese entity as one of the qualified bidders, the officials said.

“In other words, the tender should not be scrapped if it is unlikely to be awarded to a Chinese company,” the first official added.

The clarificat­ion was issued by the Union finance ministry on

Friday after stakeholde­rs raised concerns that retrospect­ive implementa­tion of the July 23 order would lead to scrapping of all tenders, resulting in a huge loss of valuable time, the second official said.

There was some confusion related to a clause of the July 23 order about ongoing tenders, he said. The clause of the Thursday order read, “If the qualified bidders include bidders from such countries [read China], the entire process shall be scrapped and initiated de novo. The de novo process shall adhere to the conditions prescribed in this The clarificat­ion issued on July 24 said “qualified bidder means only those bidders who would otherwise have been qualified for award of the tender after considerin­g all factors including price”.

“If bidders from such countries would not have qualified for award for reasons unconnecte­d with the said order (for example they do not meet tender criteria or their price bid is higher... or any other reason) then there is no need to scrap the tender/start the process de novo.”

India shares land borders

with China, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Myanmar, Nepal and Bhutan. But the July 23 order exempts some of these countries to which India extends lines of credit or provides developmen­t assistance. The Thursday order takes into its ambit all public sector companies, autonomous bodies and public-private partnershi­p (PPP) projects receiving financial support from the government. State government­s and their undertakin­gs have also been directed to follow suit.

India and China have been locked in a months-long border stand-off, which resulted in a

deadly clash last month that left 20 Indian soldiers dead. The two sides have lately failed to make a breakthrou­gh in reducing the tensions despite intense negotiatio­ns at the military and diplomatic levels, and a disengagem­ent process at some friction points has remained sluggish.

CA Vijay Kumar Gupta, former Central Council Member of the Institute of Chartered Accountant­s of India (ICAI) said: “The clarificat­ion has removed uncertaint­y about ongoing tenders. This will save significan­t time and prevent time and cost overrun.”

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