The Asian Age

AGR dues may affect Navy, banking operations

COAI: TEST CHECKS ARE STANDARD AUDIT PROCEDURE

- | NEW DELHI

New Delhi, Feb. 23: US satellite broadband provider Hughes Network Systems may have to shut its Indian operations due to unpaid levies owed to the government, which could put thousands of banking services at risk, a company letter seen by Reuters showed.

India’s Supreme Court late last year ordered a number of telecom companies, including Hughes and larger firms like Vodafone, to pay billions of dollars owed to the government.

Hughes’ India unit provides services to defense, education and banking sectors in the country and told India’s telecoms minister in a letter dated Feb. 20 that it faces bankruptcy as it can’t pay the `6 billion ($84 million) it owes.

The closure of the company could disrupt connectivi­ty at more than 70,000 banking locations and many critical satellite networks in the Indian navy, army and railways, Hughes’ India President Partho Banerjee said in the letter, which was seen by Reuters. “We are facing a huge demand ... which by no means is serviceabl­e by us and is in fact pushing our company towards bankruptcy & closure,” Banerjee said.

“This is an SOS request,” he added. The company says the government’s telecoms department had made an incorrect calculatio­n of the dues more than a decade ago which has ballooned to $84 million with interest and penalties.

Hughes, when approached by Reuters for comment, would not comment on the substance of the letter but said in a statement it “remains committed to India” and would continue to provide services to its customers.

India’s telecoms ministry did not respond to a request for comment.

Vodafone Idea, which owes $3.9 billion in dues, interest and penalties, has already warned of a potential exit, putting at risk 13,000 employees and billions of dollars in bank loans. India’s claim for unpaid dues followed a dispute with companies over how adjusted gross revenue, a percentage of which companies need to pay to the government as fee, was calculated.

While the $84 million Hughes owes is significan­tly smaller than the sums owed by larger peers, a company document from December showed it was still more than three times its net worth in India.

“This, if not resolved, will make the operation unviable thus rendering many customers like banks, other enterprise­s and critical government networks without any connectivi­ty,” the company said in a separate letter.

Hughes, which is part of US-based satellite group Echostar, said in December 2018 it had been chosen to provide highperfor­mance satellite broadband system for India’s naval communicat­ions network.

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