By Ajai Shukla
Business Standard, 5th Oct 13
Anglo-Italian helicopter company, AgustaWestland, has invoked
arbitration on the Ministry of Defence (MoD) decision to suspend a contract
worth Euro 556 million (Rs 4,650 crore) for twelve
AW-101 helicopters to ferry Indian VVIPs in comfort and safety.
The MoD suspended the purchase after the
arrest in Italy, on Feb 12, of Finmeccanica chief, Giuseppe Orsi, for allegedly
bribing Indian officials to secure the contract. Orsi headed AgustaWestland, a
Finmeccanica group company, from 2010 to 2012, when the contract was secured.
According to an AgustaWestland statement
today, the MoD has ignored repeated requests for discussions on the suspension.
The company has, therefore, exercised the next option available to it ---
arbitration.
“The ongoing need to resolve this issue has left
AgustaWestland with no other option but to invoke arbitration through Counsel;
the next step prescribed by the contract. This is not a step we take
lightly,” said AgustaWestland today.
The contract mandates that arbitration
proceedings would be conducted in India under the Indian Arbitration and
Conciliation Act, 1996. It provides for three arbitrators: one each nominated
by the buyer and the seller, and the third arbitrator nominated by mutual agreement.
With the Italian investigation and prosecution
apparently making little progress --- Orsi was released on bail in May ---
AgustaWestland is pushing back strongly against what the company sees as MoD
highhandedness.
Protesting “the unilateral suspension of the contract”,
AgustaWestland points out that “Neither the contract nor the associated
Integrity Pact confers such rights on the Indian MoD.”
Since April, AgustaWestland has repeatedly requested
the MoD for bilateral discussions on the suspension. The MoD has simply ignored
the requests.
The MoD suspended the contract when the Indian Air
Force had received only three of the contracted twelve helicopters. There is
little clarity over whether the VVIP fleet will now consist of two types of
helicopters, and also over the spares and maintenance support that the IAF can
expect from AgustaWestland after a contested termination of the contract.
At the centre of the controversy is the IAF’s dilution
in 2006 of the VVIP helicopter’s performance specifications, allegedly to make
the AW-101 helicopter compliant with the tender requirements. In 2002, when the
IAF first issued a tender, the helicopter was required to operate at altitudes
up to 6000 metres. In Nov 2003, a process of reconsideration led to the
altitude requirement being diluted to 4500 metres in a subsequent tender issued
in Sept 2006. The decision involved both the NDA government and the UPA
government that followed it.
The CBI has filed a charge-sheet against former air
force boss, Air Chief Marshal Shashindra Pal Tyagi, and twelve others.
Since 2005, AgustaWestland has repeatedly claimed that
the AW-101, which was certified only up to 4500 metres in 2002, was undergoing
certification to 6000 metres.
Says Jackie Callcut, CEO AgustaWestland
India, “The allegation often repeated in the media is that there was a
conspiracy to change the altitude requirement in the VVIP competition
to favour AgustaWestland. This allegation simply does not follow the
facts. Firstly, the 2002 competition was canceled because it resulted in a
single bidder situation due to the altitude requirement. Therefore that
requirement had to change for any procurement to proceed. Secondly, the
altitude requirement was an irrelevance to AgustaWestland anyway; it was well
known the AW101 would have been re-certified to 6000m if needed.”
Just give them to the air-force, and let them cannibalize them to operate whatever they can do with the choppers, with the engineering div working on any makeshift spares, or just sell to some international customer at discount. We dont want our taxpayer money to go to the so called VVIPs anyhow, better spent in getting snowshoes for our jawans
ReplyDeleteDear Ajay sir,
ReplyDeleteVVIP helicopter is not needed in India, but Augusta can be asked to deliver something like Seaking for the Navy. The Navy is indeed very short for flying platforms for ship defense. Moreover we can even deploy the new helicopter on INS Vikrant
I urge the govt. to either return back the 3 vvip choppers or accept the remaining 9 vvip choppers at the earliest and plz put an end to this mess. Enough is enough. Now its the time to take a binary decision.
ReplyDelete