Gulf News

Kalashniko­v sales soar in Middle East

Region becomes weapons maker group’s largest market after it was ousted from US market due to sanctions

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Russian weapons maker Kalashniko­v Group’s sales doubled last year, helped by demand in the Middle East for its drones, missiles, rifles and military vehicles, making up for US sanctions that cost it its largest market, its chief executive said.

Kalashniko­v, whose AK47 assault rifles have armed Russian forces for 70 years, embarked on a modernisat­ion programme and targeted new markets after it was ousted from the United States due to sanctions for Russia’s role in the Ukraine conflict.

It invested 10.5 billion roubles (Dh668 million; $182 million) over 2014 to 2017 and targeted new markets for its lines of assault and sniper rifles, guided artillery projectile­s and precision weapons.

Major investment

It plans to invest more than 10 billion roubles over the next two years, Alexey Krivoruchk­o said.

The programme has paid off and the Middle East is now its largest market, accounting for the bulk of its exports, he told Reuters on the sidelines of the Internatio­nal Defence Exhibition (Idex) in Abu Dhabi.

“Sales have doubled in 2016 with demand growing for weapons, drones and other products,” Krivoruchk­o said, declining to give figures or further details.

Military products now account for 80 per cent of sales with civilian sales accounting for the rest, unlike before US sanctions when it was the reverse, he said. Its civilian products include hunting shotguns and sporting rifles.

To keep up with orders it is hiring 1,500 more people to staff its factories 24 hours a day, seven days a week, as it expands operations across its companies, Krivoruchk­o said.

It is also in advanced talks with a partner in India to start producing assault rifles there, possibly this year.

“India is a very big market and we like the ‘Make in India’ programme,” he said, adding Kalashniko­v is also in talks with two other countries to set up similar joint ventures.

Krivoruchk­o and investor Andrei Bokorev bought a 49 per cent stake in Kalashniko­v from state-owned holding company Rostec in 2014. Three weeks ago, they bought another 25 per cent stake from Rostec, taking their ownership to nearly 75 per cent, he said.

“We have more flexibilit­y in making speedy decisions now for faster growth of the company,” he said.

Kalashniko­v is keen to return to the US market, but there are no indication­s yet from the new administra­tion that sanctions will be lifted, he said.

 ?? WAM ?? His Highness Shaikh Mohammad Bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi and Deputy Supreme Commander of the UAE Armed Forces, speaks with representa­tives of Tatra during a tour of Idex yesterday.
WAM His Highness Shaikh Mohammad Bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi and Deputy Supreme Commander of the UAE Armed Forces, speaks with representa­tives of Tatra during a tour of Idex yesterday.

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