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‘Foreign defence companies paid huge bribes to Indian arms dealers’

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Updated: October 31, 2016 23:25 IST
http://www.thehindu.com/news/nation...bes-to-indian-arms-dealers/article9288682.ece

The Hindu was given access to confidential details, including a key banking document, showing massive payments into accounts of companies run by the Choudhrie family.

Stunning details of millions of dollars of payments by several foreign defence companies to alleged Indian arms dealers have emerged in secret documents accessed by the BBC and The Guardian, and shared with The Hindu.

Among the key details are remittance of almost €100 million (approx Rs. 730 crore) in just 12 months by Russian arms firms into accounts of companies controlled by alleged arms dealer Sudhir Choudhrie and his family and close associates; and about £10 million paid by British company Rolls-Royce to firms linked to Mr. Choudhrie.

Mr. Choudhrie’s lawyers told the BBC that the former Delhi resident, who now lives in London, has “never paid bribes to government officials or acted as an illegal middleman in defence deals.”

The Hindu was given access to confidential details, including a key banking document of October 2, 2008 showing the massive payments into various accounts controlled by companies run by the Choudhrie family.

Mr. Choudhrie has been investigated by the CBI and Enforcement Directorate in various arms deals in the past. Ever since his name emerged in the Tehelka tapes, Mr. Choudhrie and his family have been living in London. He figures in the CBI’s confidential list of ‘Undesirable Contact Men’, who are suspected of manipulating government contracts.

BBC’s Panorama, the current affairs investigative programme, has claimed that Rolls-Royce made secret payments of around £10 million to an unregistered Indian agent. Rolls-Royce says it has zero tolerance of bribery and corruption. “Panorama has learned Rolls-Royce paid the money to companies linked to arms dealer Sudhir Choudhrie,” the report says.

In 2014 Mr. Sudhir Choudhrie and his son Bhanu were arrested as part of U.K.’s Serious Fraud Investigation Office inquiry into Rolls-Royce. Both were released without charge.

Mr. Choudhrie’s lawyers told the BBC that he “has never paid bribes to government officials or acted as an illegal middleman in defence deals.” They said he also has “no knowledge of the contents” of the Undesirable Contactmen list.

The Rolls-Royce is a key player in the Indian defence market. Its engines power among other systems, the Hawk advanced trainer aircraft of the Indian Air Force. The report raises questions about the Hawk deal.

According to BBC, Mr. Choudhrie’s son Bhanu accompanied an arms executive called Peter Ginger on a trip to Switzerland in 2007. During the trip, Mr. Ginger made a payment amounting to hundreds of thousands of pounds into a secret bank account in cash. The account was opened in the name of “Portsmouth” and bank documents show a balance of more than a million Swiss francs, the report said.

As the BAE Systems President (India), Mr. Ginger was a key negotiator on the sale of Hawk aircraft to the Indian government. All of the planes had Rolls-Royce engines and the deal was worth around £400 million to the company.

Mr. Bhanu Choudhrie’s lawyers told the BBC he’s never been paid to secure deals for Rolls-Royce in India, including the sale of Hawk jets. “Mr. Choudhrie has never paid any bribe to Mr. Ginger or anyone else”, his lawyers said. “Mr. Choudhrie has no knowledge of what bank accounts have been set up or operated by Mr. Ginger or what sums (if any) he has deposited in them in cash.”

Mr. Ginger told the BBC he has never acted for Rolls-Royce or had any financial dealings with them. He says he’s “never taken nor paid any bribes.”

Russian payments

In what could raise serious questions about India’s massive defence deals with Russia, documents accessed by BBC/Guardian and shared with The Hindu, show that Russian arms companies made massive payments to Mr. Choudhrie and family.

BBC said leaked documents from the Choudhries’ Swiss bank account show that the family’s companies were paid almost €100 million by Russian arms firms in one 12-month period alone.

One company owned by the Choudhrie family, Belinea Services Ltd, received €39.2 million between October 2007 and October 2008. Another company, Cottage Consultants Ltd, was paid €32.8 million in the same period, while a third company – Carter Consultants Inc – was paid €23 million.

The leaked documents say one of the Russian arms firms paying the Choudhries “makes cruise missiles,” the report said.

Some of the payments were viewed as suspicious at the time by the Swiss bank, Clariden Leu. Its compliance office in Singapore raised anti-money laundering alerts and the Choudhrie family accounts were reviewed by the bank’s risk management team.

It’s not clear what action – if any – the bank eventually took. But the leaked report describes the payments from the arms companies as “incoming funds from clients offset business”.

Offset payments are part of big Indian defence deals. However, neither Mr. Choudhrie nor any of the firms linked to him are approved arms agents or offset agencies in India. Nor has there been any defence deal that India has signed in which offset payments were routed through tax havens. Offsets are the share of a contract that is to be sourced/invested in India.

In the leaked documents, Clariden Leu describes the Choudhrie family as being “very wealthy with an overall fortune of approx USD 2bn.”

‘Not violated rules’

Lawyers acting for Mr. Bhanu Choudhrie told the BBC that he had no knowledge of the Clariden Leu documents. “The report to which you refer appears to be a confidential bank document. Mr. Choudhrie has not broken any money-laundering rules in any of his business dealings at any stage,” they said.

The lawyers said the BBC questions about offset payments by Russian arms companies were too vague: “You have not given the dates or amounts of the alleged payments or the basis on which you say they were ‘suspicious’ or made in relation to Russian arms deals. The business of Cottage Consultants was conducted in a lawful and proper manner.”
 
Updated: October 31, 2016 23:25 IST
http://www.thehindu.com/news/nation...bes-to-indian-arms-dealers/article9288682.ece

The Hindu was given access to confidential details, including a key banking document, showing massive payments into accounts of companies run by the Choudhrie family.

Stunning details of millions of dollars of payments by several foreign defence companies to alleged Indian arms dealers have emerged in secret documents accessed by the BBC and The Guardian, and shared with The Hindu.

Among the key details are remittance of almost €100 million (approx Rs. 730 crore) in just 12 months by Russian arms firms into accounts of companies controlled by alleged arms dealer Sudhir Choudhrie and his family and close associates; and about £10 million paid by British company Rolls-Royce to firms linked to Mr. Choudhrie.

Mr. Choudhrie’s lawyers told the BBC that the former Delhi resident, who now lives in London, has “never paid bribes to government officials or acted as an illegal middleman in defence deals.”

The Hindu was given access to confidential details, including a key banking document of October 2, 2008 showing the massive payments into various accounts controlled by companies run by the Choudhrie family.

Mr. Choudhrie has been investigated by the CBI and Enforcement Directorate in various arms deals in the past. Ever since his name emerged in the Tehelka tapes, Mr. Choudhrie and his family have been living in London. He figures in the CBI’s confidential list of ‘Undesirable Contact Men’, who are suspected of manipulating government contracts.

BBC’s Panorama, the current affairs investigative programme, has claimed that Rolls-Royce made secret payments of around £10 million to an unregistered Indian agent. Rolls-Royce says it has zero tolerance of bribery and corruption. “Panorama has learned Rolls-Royce paid the money to companies linked to arms dealer Sudhir Choudhrie,” the report says.

In 2014 Mr. Sudhir Choudhrie and his son Bhanu were arrested as part of U.K.’s Serious Fraud Investigation Office inquiry into Rolls-Royce. Both were released without charge.

Mr. Choudhrie’s lawyers told the BBC that he “has never paid bribes to government officials or acted as an illegal middleman in defence deals.” They said he also has “no knowledge of the contents” of the Undesirable Contactmen list.

The Rolls-Royce is a key player in the Indian defence market. Its engines power among other systems, the Hawk advanced trainer aircraft of the Indian Air Force. The report raises questions about the Hawk deal.

According to BBC, Mr. Choudhrie’s son Bhanu accompanied an arms executive called Peter Ginger on a trip to Switzerland in 2007. During the trip, Mr. Ginger made a payment amounting to hundreds of thousands of pounds into a secret bank account in cash. The account was opened in the name of “Portsmouth” and bank documents show a balance of more than a million Swiss francs, the report said.

As the BAE Systems President (India), Mr. Ginger was a key negotiator on the sale of Hawk aircraft to the Indian government. All of the planes had Rolls-Royce engines and the deal was worth around £400 million to the company.

Mr. Bhanu Choudhrie’s lawyers told the BBC he’s never been paid to secure deals for Rolls-Royce in India, including the sale of Hawk jets. “Mr. Choudhrie has never paid any bribe to Mr. Ginger or anyone else”, his lawyers said. “Mr. Choudhrie has no knowledge of what bank accounts have been set up or operated by Mr. Ginger or what sums (if any) he has deposited in them in cash.”

Mr. Ginger told the BBC he has never acted for Rolls-Royce or had any financial dealings with them. He says he’s “never taken nor paid any bribes.”

Russian payments

In what could raise serious questions about India’s massive defence deals with Russia, documents accessed by BBC/Guardian and shared with The Hindu, show that Russian arms companies made massive payments to Mr. Choudhrie and family.

BBC said leaked documents from the Choudhries’ Swiss bank account show that the family’s companies were paid almost €100 million by Russian arms firms in one 12-month period alone.

One company owned by the Choudhrie family, Belinea Services Ltd, received €39.2 million between October 2007 and October 2008. Another company, Cottage Consultants Ltd, was paid €32.8 million in the same period, while a third company – Carter Consultants Inc – was paid €23 million.

The leaked documents say one of the Russian arms firms paying the Choudhries “makes cruise missiles,” the report said.

Some of the payments were viewed as suspicious at the time by the Swiss bank, Clariden Leu. Its compliance office in Singapore raised anti-money laundering alerts and the Choudhrie family accounts were reviewed by the bank’s risk management team.

It’s not clear what action – if any – the bank eventually took. But the leaked report describes the payments from the arms companies as “incoming funds from clients offset business”.

Offset payments are part of big Indian defence deals. However, neither Mr. Choudhrie nor any of the firms linked to him are approved arms agents or offset agencies in India. Nor has there been any defence deal that India has signed in which offset payments were routed through tax havens. Offsets are the share of a contract that is to be sourced/invested in India.

In the leaked documents, Clariden Leu describes the Choudhrie family as being “very wealthy with an overall fortune of approx USD 2bn.”

‘Not violated rules’

Lawyers acting for Mr. Bhanu Choudhrie told the BBC that he had no knowledge of the Clariden Leu documents. “The report to which you refer appears to be a confidential bank document. Mr. Choudhrie has not broken any money-laundering rules in any of his business dealings at any stage,” they said.

The lawyers said the BBC questions about offset payments by Russian arms companies were too vague: “You have not given the dates or amounts of the alleged payments or the basis on which you say they were ‘suspicious’ or made in relation to Russian arms deals. The business of Cottage Consultants was conducted in a lawful and proper manner.”
You just beat me to it.:-)

Well thats a known fact, these deals are cash cows for political parties who get funded during elections. More than patriotism we need to have corruption free system.
 
http://economictimes.indiatimes.com...oudhuries-son-cousin/articleshow/55162504.cms

NEW DELHI: Companies associated with the son and a close relative of Sudhir Choudhrie, an Indian origin British citizen currently being investigated by the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) and Enforcement Directorate (ED) and whose name figures in CBI’s list of “undesirable” middlemen, received over a hundred million dollars from Russian arms companies in 2007-08.

ET accessed a confidential report commissioned by Credit Suisse that shows the Choudhrie "family group" – as the report described it – had 18 accounts in the bank. The accounts are, jointly or individually, in the names of Choudhrie's son, Bhanu Choudhrie, and his cousin, Aman Chopra.

Russian companies that made the payments include MiG Corp, Rosoboronexport and NPO which have significant business interests in India. The Credit Suisse report does not link payments to any specific defence deal in India. But it notes the payments are “incoming funds from clients' offset business”. In the AugustaWestland corruption case, part of the payment to middlemen were described as offset payments, according to the judgment of an Italian court.

Offsets are defined as compulsory spending foreign defence firms selling equipment to India have to undertake for sourcing local material.

Rosoboronexport is a Russian government entity in charge of military exports. All Russian military deals with India are routed through this entity. MiG Corporation makes MiG fighter jets, which are part of Indian Air Force’s fleet. In January 2010, India decided to purchase 29 MiG 29K fighters for close to $1.2 billion. NPO is a leading space and rocketry company in Russia. The Indian-Russian BrahMos joint venture was established with NPO.

ET's detailed questionnaire sent to Rosoboronexport and the London-based Choudhrie family didn't elicit any response. In response to ET's questions, a Credit Suisse spokesperson replied: "As a matter of principle, Credit Suisse does not comment upon its actual, potential or rumoured client relationships. Credit Suisse complies with applicable rules and regulations related to Anti Money Laundering".

BBC's Panorama programme obtained the Credit Suisse confidential report. Commissioned in 2008 as part of risk assessment exercise, the report notes payments were made in 2007-08 to 18 Choudhrie family group accounts through companies and bank accounts located in Seychelles, Zurich and PanamaBSE 0.93 %.


"In total there are 18 account relationships (17 in Zurich, 1 in Singapore) that were established for the Choudhrie family and relatives…. The accounts relate to the Choudhrie family group," the report, dated October 2, 2008 reads.

The report also notes Choudhrie family business operations have presence in tax havens such as British Virgin Islands, Panama and Seychelles.

PANAMA CONNECTION
Three companies – Carter Consultants Inc, Belinea Services Ltd and Cottage Consultants Ltd – also figure in the so called Panama papers. Panama papers refer to a set of documents from a Panamanian law firm on financial transactions involving companies of many individuals and entities from different countries, including India. Tax avoidance has been alleged as one of the motives behind these transactions. Panama papers show Bhanu Choudhrie
(Sudhir Choudhrie’s son) and Aman Chopra (a cousin) as directors or shareholders of the companies.

According to the Credit Suisse report, these companies received over $126 m from Russian arms companies in 2007-2008. The biggest share went to Belinea Services Ltd, Seychelles. It received over $60 million from Russian companies.

ON COTTAGE, BELINEA
On Cottage Consultants Ltd, the report says, "The background information to this account is the same as for the private account of Bhanu Choudhrie and refers to the family as being very wealthy with an overall fortune of approximate $2 billion. The family started in the catering business four generations ago and built up a number of additional businesses in real estate, aviation, property and construction companies, IT support companies etc".

The report mentions that Cottage Consultants has received "EUR 28.1 mn from State Corporation Rosonboronexport, EUR 4.7 million from PJSC RAC * MIG * and EUR 9.7 mn from ABC," since October 2007. The report links this money to the offsets business.

"PJSC RAC MIG is the leading Russian industrial corporation for design, production, sale, logisitics, support of aeronautical engineering. The flow of funds for these transfers was incoming funds from clients offset business," says
the report.

On Belinea, the report says” “Since Oct 1st 2007 there have been inflows of EUR 60.88 mn and outflows of EUR 23.6 mn. The in and out flows mirror that of Cottage Consultants limited in that EUR 37.2 mn were received from State Corporation Rosoboronexport, EUR 18.85 mn from ABC $2 mn from JSC MIC NPO".
 
http://zeenews.india.com/news/india...efence-contracts-in-india-report_1945426.html

London: British defence major Rolls Royce made ‘secret payments’ of around 10 million pounds to an Indian defence agent that may have helped the company to win a big contract for engines on Hawk aircrafts used by the Indian Air Force, a media report has said.

Hawk aircrafts are used by the Indian Air Force for training purposes.

An investigation by the Guardian and the BBC has uncovered leaked documents and testimony from insiders that suggest that Rolls-Royce may have benefited from the use of illicit payments to boost profits for years.

The network of agents is now the focus of large-scale investigations by anti-corruption agencies in Britain and the US.

The Guardian understands the inquiries are looking into specific allegations that these hired intermediaries were bribing people.

The person who is alleged to have received the secret payment of over 10 million pounds was arms dealer Sudhir Choudhrie, BBC reported on Monday.

The arms dealer, who is on the Indian government’s blacklist of people suspected of “corrupt or irregular practice” is now settled in London.

The blacklist warns government officials and ministers to be extra cautious while dealing with people and companies on the list.

The report also quoted Choudhrie’s lawyer as saying that his client has never paid bribes to Indian government officials or acted as an illegal middleman in defence deals.

Choudhrie also serves as an adviser on India to the Liberal Democrat leader Tim Farron and his family.

Rolls-Royce, which sells turbines and engines for passenger jets and military aircraft and is worth an estimated 13 billion pounds, declined to answer detailed questions.

A company spokesman said: “Concerns about bribery and corruption involving intermediaries remain subject to investigation by the Serious Fraud Office (SFO) and other authorities. We are fully cooperating with the authorities and we cannot comment on ongoing investigations.”

The Guardian/BBC investigation, broadcast on the BBC’s Panorama programme on Monday, disclosed that the use of agents by the blue-chip manufacturer is far wider than previously publicly known.

The agents have been hired in at least 12 countries: Brazil, India, China, Indonesia, South Africa, Angola, Iraq, Iran, Kazakhstan, Azerbaijan, Nigeria and Saudi Arabia.

Labour and Conservative administrations have forged close relations with Rolls-Royce and have often lobbied foreign governments to give large export contracts to the manufacturer.

Britain’s former Prime Minister David Cameron once praised it as “a world leader in the development of advanced technologies ... of which the whole country can be proud. The Duke of Cambridge called it “one of the United Kingdom’s great global companies”.

The investigation into Rolls is likely to concern ministers -- a situation that has echoes of the controversy that enveloped the SFO’s inquiry into the arms manufacturer BAE Systems. In 2006, Tony Blair’s government pulled the plug on that inquiry, saying Britain’s security would be put in danger if it was allowed to continue.

The SFO’s entirely separate investigation into Rolls-Royce became public in 2012 when the firm announced that the agency had requested information about allegations of malpractice in Indonesia and China.

The following year, the SFO, backed by special funding from the Treasury, disclosed that its director, David Green, had opened a criminal investigation into allegations of bribery and corruption. It emerged in 2014 that the Department of Justice in the US had opened its own inquiry.

A legal source said 30 investigators in Britain were now focused on the multinational’s use of agents, or middlemen, to clinch export contracts in a number of countries across several strands of its business.

PTI

First Published: Tuesday, November 1, 2016 - 15:19
 
http://www.thehindu.com/news/nation...rms-payments/article9291156.ece?homepage=true

Defence Ministry and Russian Embassy are yet to respond to revelation.
There was a stunned silence on Tuesday morning from all stakeholders to the revelation that hundreds of crores were paid to the firms controlled by alleged arms dealer Sudhir Choudhrie by British and Russian defence companies.

While the Defence Ministry and the Russian Embassy were yet to respond to the charges, Rolls-Royce refused to comment on the specific issue, but said in a statement that they “have zero tolerance to bribery and corruption” and cannot comment on ongoing investigation.

Secret documents accessed by the BBC and The Guardian, and shared exclusively with The Hindu reveal detail payment of millions of dollars by several foreign defence companies to alleged Indian arms dealer Sudhir Choudhrie and his family.

“Concerns about bribery and corruption involving intermediaries remain subject to investigation by the Serious Fraud Office (SFO) and other authorities. We are fully co-operating with the authorities and we cannot comment on ongoing investigation,” a Rolls-Royce spokesperson said in the statement.

It is for the SFO or other investigating authorities, not Rolls-Royce, to comment upon the scope and nature of the allegations they are investigating, the spokesperson said, adding, “Our decision not to comment on any allegation or claim put to us is not an admission or confirmation.”

The Defence Ministry has refused to comment so far but officials said that Mr. Chaudhari has been named in several deals in the past and the CBI is already investigating them.

The documents show details of remittance of almost €100 million (approx Rs. 730 crore) in just 12 months by Russian arms firms into accounts of companies controlled by Mr. Choudhrie, his family and close associates; and about £10 million paid by Rolls-Royce to firms linked to him.
 
HAWK_3065119g.jpg

India contracted 106 Hawk Mk-132 aircraft from BAE (U.K) in 2004, 2005 and 2010. File photo: K.R. Deepak

city_fighter_COL_3065120g.jpg


http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/is-the-arms-deal-trail-destined-to-go-cold/article9292462.ece

Sources say for any breakthrough, especially in contracts involving Russian firms, unwavering political will is necessary

The sensational revelation that hundreds of crores was paid by Russian and British arms firms to companies controlled by alleged arms dealer Sudhir Choudhrie’s family may not result in any breakthrough against corruption in defence deals in India, say defence establishment sources.

For any breakthrough, especially in deals involving Russian firms, unwavering political will is necessary, at least two senior sources familiar with the entire sector said.

On Tuesday, quoting the BBC and The Guardian, The Hindu reported that secret banking documents showed remittance of almost €100 million (about Rs. 730 crore) in just 12 months by Russian arms firms into accounts of companies controlled by Choudhrie, his family and close associates. In a separate revelation, the investigations revealed that at least £10 million was paid by the British company Rolls-Royce to firms linked to the Choudhries.

British probe
“The Rolls-Royce investigation could potentially make some breakthrough because of British investigations. However, the Russians would be a tough nut to crack,” a senior civil servant who spent several years in the Defence Ministry told The Hindu.


According to secret banking documents, one company owned by the Choudhrie family, Belinea Services Ltd., received €39.2 million between October 2007 and October 2008 from Russian firms. Another company, Cottage Consultants Ltd., was paid €32.8 million in the same period, while a third company, Carter Consultants Inc, was paid €23 million by the Russians.

The leaked documents say one of the Russian arms firms paying the Choudhries “makes cruise missiles”, the report said.

Some of the payments were viewed as suspicious at the time by the Swiss bank, Clariden Leu. Its compliance office in Singapore raised anti-money laundering alerts and the Choudhrie family accounts were reviewed by the bank’s risk management team.

“Russians are not going to give anything away, unless strong political pressure is applied,” the official said. “We will have to see how much the government will go forward with it.”

Not just because of the Russian angle, the fear of no breakthrough in investigations is also linked to the failure of Indian investigation agencies over the years to nail corruption in defence deals conclusively.

Through the past several decades, the CBI and the Enforcement Directorate have investigated allegations of corruption in many defence deals. However, not one of them has resulted in successful conviction of all the accused.

In many of those cases, they were closed by the agency saying lack of evidence.

2007 case
In 2007 the CBI had claimed corruption in the upgrade of artillery guns, and named Sudhir Choudhrie and others. In 2010, the agency told a Delhi court that it had no evidence to prosecute Mr. Choudhrie, and whatever money his company received from the Israeli company Soltam was for “stainless steel kitchen utensils”.

The agency has also filed cases in the past against Abshishek Verma and his wife, Anca Neacsu.

However, the charge sheet is yet to be filed.

Similarly, in the ongoing investigations into the allegations of bribery in the purchase of VVIP helicopters from AgustaWestland by the Indian Air Force too, there is no major breakthrough on the Indian side. Most of the information that is known has all emerged in Italian investigations.
 
http://economictimes.indiatimes.com...lacklist-rolls-royce/articleshow/55200630.cms

NEW DELHI: The government will for now stick to its decision to not blacklist Rolls-Royce despite fresh evidence surfacing in the ongoing investigation in UK about the global engine manufacturer as well as some Russian armament firms allegedly making "secret payments" to controversial arms dealer Sudhir Choudhrie.

Secret documents accessed by BBC and The Guardian allegedly show payments of hundreds of millions of dollars from Rolls-Royce and Russian companies like MiG Corp, Rosoboronexport and NPO to companies controlled by Choudhrie, his son Bhanu and other family members.

A British citizen of Indian origin, Choudhrie has been under the scanner of CBI and ED in several arms deals but the agencies have failed to pin him down till now despite putting his name in the list of "undesirable contact men". India has inked deals worth billions of dollars with Russian firms as well as Rolls-Royce, whose engines power Indian Jaguar fighters, Avro planes, VVIP Embraer Legacy jets, C-130J "Super Hercules", Hawk AJTs and the like, over the years.

IAF and Navy, for instance, are now close to inducting all of the 123 Hawk AJTs, which are manufactured by BAE Systems but have the Adour Mk.871engines of Rolls-Royce, ordered to train rookie pilots till now. The overall project is worth over Rs 16,000 crore.

Defence ministry sources said on Tuesday that "there is no reason" as of now to stop dealing with Rolls-Royce, even as CBI and ED will "continue their independent probes against Choudhrie, a known defence middleman".

Choudhrie's lawyer, however, has held his client has never paid bribes to Indian government officials or acted as an illegal middleman. In a statement, Rolls-Royce in turn said, "Concerns about bribery and corruption involving intermediaries remain subject to investigation by the (British) Serious Fraud Office (SFO) and other authorities. We are fully cooperating with the authorities and we cannot comment on ongoing investigations."
 
Ministry of Defence
22-November, 2016 15:13 IST
Role of London based Arms Dealer in Defence Deals

As per the information received from CBI, a criminal case was registered by CBI against one Shri Sudhir Chowdhrie and others in April 2007 in the matter of the award of the capital contract for upgunning of guns, in March, 2000. The CBI Report, inter-alia, indicates that the available evidence was insufficient to implicate the accused on the charges involving alleged payment of commission to the agents/middlemen. CBI subsequently informed that after completing the investigation, a closure report was filed in the concerned Court on 29.09.2010 and the same was accepted on 10.08.2011. The Court has also directed the Enforcement Directorate to further investigate the matter.

Government is aware of recent media reports alleging inter-alia, payments by defence vendors to various companies belonging to Shri Sudhir Chowdhrie. This matter has been referred to the relevant agencies for investigation.

This information was given by Minister of State for Defence Dr. Subhash Bhamre in a written reply to Shri Sukhendu Sekhar Roy in Rajya Sabha today.
 
Ministry of Defence
29-November, 2016 15:29 IST
Policy of Blacklisting Defence Firms

Ministry of Defence has recently issued Guidelines for penalties in business dealings with entities, which have come into effect from 21.11.2016. The Guidelines have also been put in public domain by uploading them on the website of Ministry of Defence (http://mod.nic.in/writereaddata/guideentities.pdf). The Guidelines lay down policy for levy of financial penalties and / or Suspension / Banning of business dealings with entities, seeking to enter into contract with / having entered into a contract for the procurement of goods and services by the Ministry of Defence.

During the last three years, business dealings with six companies / entities have been put on hold and in respect of two other firms restricted procurement was permitted only if such procurements are justified and necessary on the basis of operational urgency, national security and non-availability of other alternatives.

This information was given by Minister of State for Defence Dr. Subhash Bhamre in a written reply to Smt Sarojini Hembram in Rajya Sabha today.
 
http://www.deccanherald.com/content/584372/no-firm-blacklisted-misconduct-def.html
New Delhi, Dec 2, 2016 (PTI)

No firm or entity has been blacklisted for misconduct or wrongdoing in defence deals in the last three years, Defence Minister Manohar Parrikar said today.

He, however, said six firms have been debarred from carrying out further business dealings with Ministry of Defence for a period of ten years. "This was further made applicable to all allied/ subsidiary firms of each of the debarred firms until further orders or until such time as the order of debarring of the firm subsists, whichever is earlier," he informed the Lok Sabha during Question Hour.

The minister also said that business dealings have been suspended or put on hold in respect of 13 firms.

"In respect of another four firms, orders have been issued restricting procurement from the concerned firms to cases where procurements are justified and necessary on the basis of operational urgency, national security and non-availability of other alternatives," he added.

Parrikar said the ministry has recently issued guidelines for penalties in business dealings with entities, which have come into effect from November 21.

The guidelines lay down policy for levy of financial penalties and/or suspension or banning of business dealings with entities, seeking to enter into contract with or having entered into a contract for the procurement of goods and services by the ministry.

"It has also been decided to review existing cases of suspension/ban/blacklisting etc against vendors in light of the new guidelines dated November 21, 2016," he added.

In reply to another question, the minister said the government has undertaken some defence research and development projects with Israel.

Israeli companies have also set up joint ventures with Indian companies for manufacture of defence equipment as well as R&D.

"Some of the procurement cases with Israel companies also involve transfer of technology. Further, the collaboration with foreign countries for strategic tie-ups is an ongoing process to safeguard overall security of the country," he said.

He also said that India was using technologies such as laser and electronic fencing to secure Indian boundaries with Pakistan.
 
http://indianexpress.com/article/in...eged-middleman-in-embraer-deal-probe-4551073/

By: PTI | New Delhi | Published:March 2, 2017 2:47 pm

The CBI has recorded the statement of businessman Vipin Khanna in connection with its probe in the case of payment of alleged commission by aircraft maker Embraer to clinch the USD 208-million deal with India. The agency is probing the alleged payment of USD 5.70 million as commission to seal the deal, sources said. The deal for three aircraft, which were to be used by the Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) for air-borne radar systems, was inked with Embraer in 2008.

According to defence procurement rules of India, middlemen are strictly barred in defence deals.

They said Khanna, who is a suspect in the FIR registered by the CBI, was also asked about his alleged links with people whom he is understood to have approached to influence the deal.

The agency has received records from the United States about the deal. On the basis of these documents, the CBI also asked Khanna to clarify the money trail of the alleged commission.

Embraer has been under investigation by the US Justice Department since 2010 when a contract with the Dominican Republic raised suspicions, the report said.

The sources said 87-year-old Khanna might be called again in connection with its probe.

A Brazilian newspaper had alleged that that the company had taken the services of middlemen to clinch deals in Saudi Arabia and India.

After the CBI had registered a preliminary enquiry, Embraer had said in a statement, “Since 2011, Embraer has publicly reported that it has been conducting an extensive internal investigation and cooperating with the authorities on investigations regarding alleged violations of the FCPA.


“The company voluntarily expanded the scope of the investigation, systematically reporting the progress of the case to the market.


“The company is not party of the legal proceedings in Brazil. Therefore, it does not have access to the information contained therein,” it had said.
 
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