Muscat Daily

Hollande fuels Rafale jet row in India

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New Delhi, India - Former French president Francois Hollande has fuelled controvers­y over India’s multi-billion-dollar 2016 purchase of 36 Rafale fighter jets, saying that France was given no choice on the Indian partner for manufactur­er Dassault.

His comments on Friday stoked debate over a subject which has gained significan­t traction in India in recent weeks, since the opposition Congress party accused Prime Minister Narendra Modi of favouring a private conglomera­te over a public company in the aircraft deal.

The party alleges Modi gave preferenti­al treatment to industrial­ist Anil Ambani, the billionair­e chairman of Reliance Group, to the detriment of state-run Hindustan Aeronautic­s Limited (HAL).

Officials in India and France say Dassault had freely chosen to partner with Reliance, despite Ambani having no previous experience in the aeronautic­s sector.

“We did not have a say in that,” Hollande told investigat­ive website Mediapart. "It was the Indian government that proposed this service group (Re- liance), and Dassault who negotiated with Ambani.”

“We did not have a choice, we took the interlocut­or who was given to us,” added Hollande, who was president of France from 2012-2017.

French firm Dassault had spent years negotiatin­g a deal for 126 fighter jets to be manufac- tured in India with HAL, but talks had stalled.

On taking office, the Modi government cancelled the negotiatio­ns and decided to directly purchase 36 jets made in France.

Hollande denied any conflict of interest with Reliance, which partially financed a film produced by his girlfriend Julie Gayet in 2016.

“That is why, moreover, this group (Reliance) did not have to give me any thanks for anything.

I could not even imagine that there was any connection to a film by Julie Gayet.”

Speaking on the sidelines of a meeting in Canada on Friday, the former French leader insisted that France ‘did not choose Reliance in any way’.

When asked whether India had put pressure on Reliance and Dassault to work together, Hol- lande said he was unaware and ‘only Dassault can comment on this’.

Contacted by AFP, France’s embassy in New Delhi did not comment.

India’s Defence Ministry wrote on Twitter that neither the Indian nor French government ‘had any say in the commercial decision’.

The French Foreign Ministry later issued a statement saying that ‘the sole obligation­s of the

French government were to assure delivery and the quality of the equipment’.

Paris was ‘in no way involved in the choice of Indian industrial partners’, it added.

For its part, Dassault Aviation said in a statement on Friday that the contract was ‘a government­to-government agreement’.

Congress party president Rahul Gandhi, who has led the opposition’s focus on the deal, wrote, ‘Thanks to Francois Hollande, we now know he (Modi) personally delivered a deal worth billions of dollars to a bankrupt Anil Ambani’.

‘The PM has betrayed India. He has dishonoure­d the blood of our soldiers’, Gandhi added.

Foreign manufactur­ers obtaining arms contracts in India are obliged to reinvest a portion of the sums collected in India.

Under the Rafale deal, France must spend amounts totalling around half the € 8bn paid by the Indian government. Dassault has invested more than € 100mn in its joint venture with Reliance.

India - the world’s largest defence importer - has been investing tens of billions in updating its Soviet-era military hardware to counter long-standing territoria­l disputes with its nuclear-armed neighbours. It intends to use compensati­ons payments such as in the Rafale deal to create a local defence industry.

 ?? (AFP) ?? A supporter of the Indian Youth Congress during a protest against Rafale jet deal in New Delhi on Saturday
(AFP) A supporter of the Indian Youth Congress during a protest against Rafale jet deal in New Delhi on Saturday

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