The Indian Express (Delhi Edition)

Former IAF chief Tyagi, 2 others held

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Such changes in operationa­l requiremen­ts, Singh said, made the private company (Agustawest­land) eligible to participat­e in the request for proposal for VVIP helicopter­s.

“It was revealed during investigat­ion that such undue favours were allegedly shown to said Uk-based private company by accepting illegal gratificat­ion from the accused vendors through middlemen/relatives including his cousin and an advocate etc. who accepted the illegal gratificat­ion for exercising influence through illegal means, or using personal influence over the concerned public servants,” the CBI spokespers­on said.

In February 2010, the UPA government had signed a contract with Agustawest­land Internatio­nal Ltd (AWIL) for supply of 12 AW 101 VVIP helicopter­s at an aggregated price of Rs 3726.96 crore. The government cancelled the deal in January 2014 “on grounds of breach of the pre-contract integrity pact and the agreement” by AWIL.

CBI sources said the Tyagi brothers and Khaitan were called for questionin­g Friday morning and were arrested in the afternoon after they did not cooperate in the investigat­ion.

CBI officials claimed to have collected evidence against the Tyagis and Khaitan, which includes informatio­n on their financial transactio­ns. Details of the evidence were not, however, shared by the agency.

Earlier this year, Italian authoritie­s had shared 1.5 lakh documents related to the deal and the alleged bribes. These documents, CBI sources said, “were helpful”.

The CBI alleged that Indians were paid bribes of Rs 362 crore to swing the deal in favour of Agustawest­land. Is probe found that bribes were allegedly paid through a complex web of companies and middlemen based in Italy, UK, Tunisia, Mauritius, Singapore, British Virgin Islands, Switzerlan­d and the UAE. Letters rogatory were sent to these entities and, sources said, the BVI and Tunisia have “partially replied”.

The Enforcemen­t Directorat­e (ED), also investigat­ing the case, too filed chargeshee­ts against Khaitan and alleged middleman Christian Michel.

According to the ED chargeshee­ts, cousins of S P Tyagi played a major role in bringing in middlemen to swing the deal for Agustawest­land and had begun negotiatin­g even before Tyagi became IAF chief in January 2005.

Investigat­ions found that Guido Haschke, who had been brought into the deal in 2004, allegedly by the Tyagi brothers, was so confident of their abilities that he had begun payments to them from Agustawest­land in 2004 itself.

The ED prosecutio­n complaint notes: “Tyagi brothers namely Sanjeev, Rajeev and Sandeep, cousins of S P Tyagi, who had long acquaintan­cewithguid­ohaschkean­dcarlo Gerosa (another alleged middleman)... entered into a consultanc­y contract with Gordanserv­icessarl,tunisiain2­004.gordon Services was linked to Haschke and Gerosa. The Tyagi brothers received Euro 1.26 lakh after May 2004 and Euro 2 lakh after February 2005 .Tyagi brothers, including S P Tyagi, also received some amount in cash.”

In June, the ED told a Delhi special court that Christian Michel allegedly received Euro 30 million as kickbacks and sent cash packets to various people through his driver and regularly met Indian individual­s, including cousins of S P Tyagi, while brokering the deal.

According to investigat­ions conducted by CBI and ED, in the offset category (work to be mandatoril­y done in India), Agustawest­land set aside Euro 70 million which would be transferre­d to the companies floated by two groups of alleged middlemen — one led by Haschke and Gerosa and the other by Christian Michel.

“The real deal was, however, that of the Euro 70 million, only 30 per cent would be utilised for actual work including engineerin­g services and media handling while the rest would be diverted to pay bribes,” an investigat­or said.

To facilitate this, a maze of companies was created to move money across borders and camouflage bribes. While Christian Michel set up Global Services FZE in Dubai, Haschke set up IDS Tunisia, IDS Mauritius andaeromat­rix.michelwass­upposedtog­et Euro 42 million while Haschke was to be giveneuro2­8million,investigat­orsclaimed.

The CBI had filed an FIR in the case on March 14, 2013 after a preliminar­y enquiry. The FIR named Tyagi and 12 other individual­s as accused, besides four companies — Finmeccani­ca, Agustawest­land, IDS Infotech and Aeromatrix.

Individual­s named in the FIR include Finmeccani­ca officials Giuseppe Orsi and Bruno Spagnolini, the Tyagi family, alleged middlemen Carlo Gerosa, Christian Michel and Guido Haschke, advocate Gautam Khaitan, formerly associated with Aeromatrix, and its CEO Praveen Bakshi.

The FIR was filed on the basis of documents the CBI received from Italy and files from the Ministry of Defence which it said “indicatecr­iminalcons­piracytoma­kealterati­onsinthere­quiremento­fhelicopte­rspecifica­tions which suited Agustawest­land”.

A particular document produced in the Milan Court of Appeals which, on April 8, convicted Orsi and Spagnolini on charges of corruption, had also brought Congress politician­s and some bureaucrat­s under the scanner. The document mentioned codes like “AP”, “Fam”, “Pol” and “Bur” against payments that needed to be made. The codes, officials said, have been interprete­d as Ahmed Patel, family of S P Tyagi, politician­s and bureaucrat­s respective­ly. Christian Michel, however, claimed that this document was forged by Haschke.

Rejecting the charge and seeking a probe, Ahmed Patel declared he would quit Rajya Sabha and public life if any wrongdoing on his part was establishe­d. Defence Minister Manohar Parrikar too angered the Congress when he targeted the party’s leadership, saying “it appears that an invincible hand was guiding the action or inaction of CBI and ED. the country wants to know who instigated, who supported and who benefited from the corruption. we cannot let this pass”.

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