The Asian Age

MoD’s softer blacklist norms likely to be finalised today

Move to ensure acquisitio­n of arms is not hit

- AGE CORRESPOND­ENT NEW DELHI, NOV. 6

To expedite acquisitio­n of military hardware and ensure the armed forces are not crippled due to the lack of key defence equipment, the Defence Acquisitio­n Council (DAC) will likely finalise a regime of softer blacklisti­ng norms on Monday.

According to sources, while promoting transparen­cy and rationalis­ation of standards, the new policy will seek to levy penalties — graded from stiff to soft — on entities found violating the Defence Procuremen­t Procedure Rules.

India’s tough blacklisti­ng norms had severely handicappe­d defence procuremen­t for several years.

To expedite acquisitio­n of military hardware and ensure the Armed forces are not crippled due to the lack of key defence equipment, the Defence Acquisitio­n Council (DAC) will likely finalise a regime of softer blacklisti­ng norms on Monday.

According to sources, while promoting transparen­cy and rationalis­ation of standards, the new policy will seek to levy penalties — graded from stiff to soft — on entities found violating Defence Procuremen­t Procedure Rules.

India’s tough blacklisti­ng norms, which prescribed a blanket ban on the procuremen­t of all products of a blackliste­d company, had severely handicappe­d defence procuremen­t, impacting the government’s

The new policy will seek to levy penalties — graded from stiff to soft — on entities found violating Defence Procuremen­t Procedure Rules

The DAC is likely to approve the opening of commercial bids for four Landing Platform Docks, a $3bn project

drive to modernise the Armed forces.

On October 25, defence minister Manohar Parrikar said the issues have already been discussed and the DAC members are fine-tuning the policy. Insisting that “serious crimes” should not go unpunished, Mr Parrikar voiced concerns over indiscrimi­nate blacklisti­ng of companies supplying defence products over “small issues”. “If I have a platform where the company has been banned, I can’t stop operating that platform because the company is now blackliste­d which supplied me the platform. So whose loss is it? You have to see the national security considerat­ion and not resort to knee-jerk reactions,” he said, adding that even exemptions would be resorted keeping national security in mind.

The DAC — the MoD’s apex procuremen­t panel — is likely to approve the opening of commercial bids for four Landing Platform Docks, an over $3 billion project for which two Indian private shipyards are vying under the ‘Make in India’ initiative. The panel may also give consent to the acquisitio­n of 12 amphibious aircraft from Japan at the cost of `10,000 crore for the Navy. The deal would then be inked during PM Modi’s visit to Tokyo on November 11 and 12.

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