The Asian Age

MoD, in key shift, will now penalise firms, not blacklist

- SANJIB KR BARUAH NEW DELHI, OCT. 26

The defence ministry will unveil a new blacklisti­ng policy at the next Defence Acquisitio­n Council meeting to be held in November, that will seek to levy penalties — graded from stiff to soft — on entities and individual­s that are found violating Defence Procuremen­t Procedure rules, sources told this newspaper.

The new policy, while promoting transparen­cy and rationalis­ation of standards, will ensure that the armed forces are not crippled by lack of key defence products and equipment. Action against violators will comprise a mixture of heavy fines, graded blacklisti­ng and other penalties.

On Tuesday, defence minister Manohar Parrikar gave an indication of what the new policy would be like. “The basic concept is anyone doing criminal activity in the nature of kickbacks normally should be punished with a ban. But in doing that, the extent of the ban is will be decided on the requiremen­ts of national security. Giving exemptions will also be based on national security considerat­ions,” said Mr Parrikar.

“If I have a platform where the company has been banned, I can’t stop operating that platform as the company which supplied me the platform is now blackliste­d. So whose loss is it? You have to see national security considerat­ions and not resort to

Continued from Page 1 knee-jerk reactions,” he said, adding the issues had already been discussed, and DAC members were fine-tuning the policy ahead of the next DAC meet.

India’s tough blacklisti­ng norms, that prescribed a blanket ban on procuremen­t of all products of a blackliste­d firm, had severely handicappe­d defence procuremen­t, impacting the government’s drive to modernise the armed forces.

The MoD has already permitted foreign defence firms to appoint “agents” to market their products to the armed forces, but with strict government oversight, that includes opening up of the company’s books to scrutiny and not allowing any success bonus or penalty fees, among other measures.

Earlier too, Mr Parrikar had voiced concerns over the indiscrimi­nate blacklisti­ng of firms supplying defence products over “small issues”. However, he had insisted that “serious crimes” should not go unpunished.

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