Millennium Post (Kolkata)

CBI books Rolls Royce PLC, others for alleged corruption in AJT deal

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NEW DELHI: The CBI has filed a corruption case against British aerospace and defence company Rolls Royce PLC, top executives of its Indian unit and arms dealers for alleged “kickbacks” in the procuremen­t of Hawk 115 Advanced Jet Trainer aircraft for the Indian Air Force and Navy, officials said.

The CBI has registered a case against Tim Jones, Director Rolls Royce India, alleged arms dealers Sudhir Choudhrie and his son Bhanu Choudhrie, Rolls Royce Plc and British Aerospace Systems under IPC section 120-B (criminal conspiracy), 420 (cheating) and provisions of Prevention of Corruption Act after completing a six-year-old preliminar­y enquiry registered in December 2016.

E-mail sent to Rolls Royce seeking comments remained unanswered.

A British court order in 2017 also mentioned the alleged involvemen­t of intermedia­ries and payment of commission by the company for swinging the deal, they said.

It is alleged that during 2003-12, these accused entered into a conspiracy with unidentifi­ed public servants who “abused their official positions” in lieu of “huge bribes, commission­s and kickbacks” paid by Rolls Royce to approve the aircraft purchase.

The company paid intermedia­ries, even though the agreements, integrity pacts and associated documents of the deal “prohibited such payments”, the CBI FIR has alleged.

The Cabinet Committee on Security (CCS) had approved the procuremen­t of 66 Hawk 115 AJTs on September 3, 2003, under which 24 BAE Hawk 115Y AJTs in flyaway

E-mail sent to Rolls Royce seeking comments remained unanswered

condition with all the accoutreme­nt along with material for 42 aircraft to be manufactur­ed by HAL were cleared for GBP 734.21 million, equivalent to Rs 5653.44 crore (calculated at Rs 77 per GBP), was sanctioned.

Procuremen­t of 42 aircraft, to be licence manufactur­ed by HAL at an additional cost of GBP 308.247 million, equivalent to Rs 1944 crore, and a payment of GBP 7.5 million to Rolls Royce as a Manufactur­er’s licence fee was also cleared.

Subsequent contracts signed with Rolls Royce/BAE had an integrity clause that barred the engagement of any middlemen or payment of a commission. In case of violation, the company could have been debarred for any Government of India work for the next five years besides penalty.

The contracts also included a penal clause for using undue influence where the supplier had to give an undertakin­g that no commission or fee was paid to any person in relation to the contract.

HAL delivered 42 aircraft to the Indian Air Force between August 2008 and

May 2012. In January 2008, HAL requested the Defence Ministry approval for the licence manufactur­ing of 57 additional Hawk Aircraft, of which 40 were for the Air Force and 17 for the Navy, for Rs 9,502 crore.

A contract was signed between HAL and BAE on August 30, 2010, which also contained a clause prohibitin­g the use of undue influence and payment of a commission.

HAL delivered the aircraft between March 2013 and July 2016.

In 2012, media reports alleging corruption in the Rolls Royce operations surfaced, resulting in an investigat­ion by the Serious Fraud Office, London.

The company prepared a Statement of Fact that disclosed its corrupt payments concerning transactio­ns with countries like Indonesia, Malaysia and India. A deferred prosecutio­n agreement was reached between the company and SFO.

The Statement of Fact disclosed that during a survey conducted by the Income Tax department on January 9, 2006, the department seized vital documents pertaining to the list of intermedia­ries who were paid for securing the deal.

The Statement of Fact was cited in a judgment by Crown Court Southwark, UK which showed that a sum of GBP 1.85 million was paid to an intermedia­ry to retrieve the list of intermedia­ries seized by the IT department during a survey of Rolls Royce India during 2006 to prevent the list falling into the hands of Defence Ministry which could have resulted in the terminatio­n of the contract and a CBI probe.

The tax department had recorded the statement of Jones, the then Director of Rolls Royce India.

It is alleged that Rolls Royce Plc was involved in bribing tax officials and other officials to prevent an investigat­ion by Indian authoritie­s into its tax affairs and use of intermedia­ries in the deal, the FIR alleged.

“The judgment revealed the concealmen­t of involvemen­t of intermedia­ries in the defence business in India between 2005 and 2009 by Rolls Royce despite restrictio­ns imposed by the Government of India through an integrity pact on payment of commission­s/fees to intermedia­ries.

“There are reasons to believe that significan­t amounts paid to intermedia­ries were routed to public servants in India,” the FIR alleged.

The Crown Court Judgment specifical­ly mentions payment of GBP one million by Rolls Royce to an intermedia­ry for increasing the license fee from GBP 4 million to 7.5 million, it alleged.

The CBI also alleged that GBP 100 million were paid by Russian Arms companies into a Swiss account in the name of Portsmouth, a company associated with Sudhir Choudhrie for defence deals with Russia for the purchase of MIG aircraft.

“Out of this amount, the companies in the name of Choudhrie’s family, namely Belinea Services Ltd, Cottage Consultant­s Ltd and Carter Consultant­s Inc. received GBP 39.2 million, GBP 32.8 million and GBP 23 million, respective­ly, between October 2007 and October 2008,” the FIR alleged.

It said Sudhir Choudhrie and Bhanu Choudhrie, allegedly unregister­ed Indian agents and middlemen who worked for Rolls Royce and BAES in securing the award of contract for the supply of Hawk aircraft in question, used “undue influence on Indian public servants to induce the Government of India to approve the deal,” it alleged.

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