Times of Suriname

India says will not scrap French jet deal Opposition demands inquiry

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INDIA India has vowed to stand firm on a multibilli­on dollar deal to buy warplanes from France’s Dassault Aviation, as the opposition Congress party called yesterday for an inquiry into allegation­s of wrongdoing.

Former French President Francois Hollande, who approved the deal when he was in office, triggered a political storm in India after he said the Indian government influenced the choice of a local partner in the deal.

New Delhi has denied the allegation­s, but opposition parties are gunning for Prime Minister Narendra Modi over the 2016 purchase of 36 Rafale planes estimated to be worth $8.7 billion, saying he overpaid for the planes and had not been transparen­t. Congress’ national spokesman Sanjay Jha said they would call for a joint parliament­ary committee to investigat­e the deal, and organize public protests. “We will take it to the people’s court through protests and demonstrat­ions as what is involved in this massive fraud is the taxpayers money,” he told Reuters.

Finance Minister Arun Jaitley said on Sunday that the deal would proceed as planned. “These jets will come to India. They will enhance the combat ability of the Indian Air Force,” Jaitley told television news agency ANI, a Reuters affiliate.

In recent months, the opposition has questioned the government on the choice of billionair­e Indian businessma­n Anil Ambani’s Reliance Defence as Dassault’s local partner instead of a state-run manufactur­er with decades of experience.

On Friday, Hollande told French news service Mediapart that New Delhi had put pressure on Dassault to choose Reliance.

“We had no choice. We took the interlocut­or that was given to us,” Hollande was quoted as saying.

Dassault has said it had picked Reliance as a partner for industrial reasons. Reliance has so far not commented on the matter.

Under Indian defense procuremen­t rules, a foreign firm must invest at least 30 percent of the contract in India to help it build up its manufactur­ing base and wean off imports. The French foreign ministry has said French authoritie­s were not involved in the choice of Indian industrial partners involved in the Rafale deal.

India’s air force says it needs new combat jets to face a perceived twin threat from China and Pakistan.

The Rafale planes were picked from a field that included Lockheed Martin’s F16, Saab’s Gripen, the Eurofighte­r Typhoon, Boeing’s F/A18E/F Super Hornet and the Russian MiG-35.

(Reuters)

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