Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

TTV Dhinakaran to announce name of his party on March 15

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After a series of legal skirmishes over allotment of a party symbol, sidelined AIADMK leader TTV Dhinakaran on Sunday said he would announce the name of his party and unveil the flag in Madurai later this week. “Following the acceptance of our plea in Delhi high court, a function to announce the name of the party and introduce the party flag will be held on March 15 at Melur” he said in a statement here. The Delhi HC, on March 9, allowed Dhinakaran’s plea for allotment of a common symbol for the AIADMK faction led by him.

The Rafale jet contract is a “very clean deal” conforming to “Indian and French laws” and those raising questions about it have misinterpr­eted numbers to conclude that India paid too much for the warplanes, Eric Trappier, the CEO of Dassault Aviation SA, which builds the Rafale, said in an interview on Saturday.

“As far as I am concerned… as a witness and as someone in charge of the performanc­e of the contract…I may tell you very clearly, it is a very clean deal. How can I not do a clean deal with all the laws in France and India?” said Trappier, who is accompanyi­ng French President Emmanuel Macron on his India visit.

His comments came a day after the Congress alleged that the Narendra Modi government caused a loss of ₹12,632 crore to the exchequer by inking the September 2016 deal for 36 Rafale planes.

Quoting figures from Dassault’s annual report for 2017, the opposition party alleged that India had paid ₹351 crore more for each jet than other Rafale customers such as Egypt and Qatar.

“The figures in the report were given by me one-and-ahalf years ago. The numbers include not only the Rafale deal but also covers Mirage-2000 support. I know that because the figures are coming from me,” said Trappier.

He said before the deals were inked, the French government checked that per unit price of the Rafale was the same for all three customers: India, Egypt and Qatar.

He said the final cost package would vary depending on the “scope of each deal”.

“Price varies depending on the package, support, weapons, country-specific requiremen­ts, number of bases…There are a huge number of parameters in the contract. There can be no comparison. It’s like apples and oranges. The scope of each deal is different,” he said.

For instance, post-sales support, he said, was a part of the deal with India but not for deals with some other countries.

In the absence of such details, he seemed to suggest, it made no sense to criticise the deal.

“How can you find a way to be able to say one deal is more expensive than the other? Is it very profession­al to do so?”

Trappier said he was unaffected by the controvers­y the Rafale deal has stirred in India.

“What is important for me is what the IAF (Indian Air Force) thinks, what the Indian defence ministry thinks and we have no problem with them. So that’s most important for me…the noise is something else,” he said.

Trappier said the deal for the

CHENNAI: NEWDELHI: There are a huge number of parameters in the contract. There can be no comparison.

It’s like apples and oranges. The scope of each deal is different.

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