The Asian Age

Tejas project not to be shelved: DefMin

DefMin says no question of Rafale deal going the Bofors way We are not ditching it, not shutting it down. On the contrary, we are looking at an upgraded and strengthen­ed version of the Tejas... — Nirmala Sitharaman, Defence minister

- SANJIB KR BARUAH

New Delhi: Scotching recent media reports that the government has “shelved” the plan to acquire the homemade Tejas Light Combat Aircraft fighter, defence minister Nirmala Sitharaman said that the Tejas plan is “on” and the government has not “ditched” it.

Scotching recent media reports that the government has “shelved” the plan to acquire the homemade Tejas Light Combat Aircraft ( LCA) fighter, defence minister Nirmala Sitharaman said during an informal interactio­n on Saturday that the Tejas plan is “on” and the government has not “ditched” it.

“We are not ditching it, not shutting it down. On the contrary, we are looking at an upgraded and strengthen­ed version of the Tejas. The IAF will have a combinatio­n of single engine fighters and India’s Tejas will hold importance. I reject the idea that Tejas has been ignored by us. We want Tejas’s Mk- II version,” the minister said, adding that the Hindustan Aeronautic­s Limited ( HAL), which makes the Tejas, has been asked to produce more aircraft at a faster rate. “We want them to produce much more. We have to increase production from the 6- 8 that we make a year.”

The Tejas is a supersonic, lightweigh­t, all- weather, multi- role fighter designed for air- to- air, airtogroun­d and air- to- sea combat roles. It is expected to plug a vital gap in IAF’s might that is suffering from a critical shortage of fighter squadrons. The government had already ordered for 83 HAL- made Tejas fighters.

At present, about 70 per cent of the LCA components are manufactur­ed in India.

“It is meant for the Navy as well,” the minister said. More than a year back, Navy Chief Admiral Sunil Lanba had slammed the aircraft. “The LCA Navy in its present form does not meet the naval qualitativ­e requiremen­ts to be a carrier- based aircraft... It doesn’t meet the weight and thrust ratio requiremen­t to be able to take off with full weapon load,” he had said.

Talking about the export potential of the aircraft, Ms Sitharaman said that many countries have evinced interest on it. “We are talking to HAL and finding out if we can outsource some of the work to domestic producers and also if we can export it to others.”

On the Rafale aircraft deal that has snowballed into a controvers­y on grounds of alleged corruption, the minister dismissed the possibilit­y of the Rafale deal “going the Bofors way”.

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