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Rs 3,546 cr AgustaWestland VVIP chopper deal scrapped by India over kickbacks row

Bribe charge spells doom for AgustaWestland VVIP chopper deal; India had frozen the deal in February.

ENDING a deadlock that lasted almost a year, the government Wednesday terminated the Rs 3,546-crore VVIP chopper deal on the grounds that Anglo-Italian firm AgustaWestland had breached the integrity pact by allegedly paying kickbacks.

The formal cancellation of the deal was announced after Defence Minister A K Antony met Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and apprised him of developments in the case.

India had frozen the deal in February following a series of reports in The Indian Express that exposed claims that kickbacks worth 51 million euros were generated in the deal to supply 12 state-of-the-art helicopters to the IAF to fly VVIPs.

Over the last two years, the paper reported extensively on the complex web of middlemen, fixers, officials as well as the alleged money trail of the bribes said to have been paid to bag the contract.

While India has paid more than 45 per cent of the contract amount after the deal was signed in 2010, it has so far received only three aircraft. Termination of the deal means no more money will be paid and the government will take steps to recover the payment already made.

?The Government of India has terminated with immediate effect the Agreement that was signed with M/s. AgustaWestland International Ltd., (AWIL) on 8 February 2010 for the supply of 12 VVIP/VIP helicopters on grounds of breach of the Pre-Contract Integrity Pact (PCIP) and the Agreement by AWIL,? the government statement said.

The cancellation of the deal has been complicated by the fact that AgustaWestland late last year invoked the arbitration clause in the contract, taking legal recourse after the government had frozen payments in February.

On Wednesday, the government said while it has been of the view that the integrity related issues are not subject to arbitration, it has decided to participate in the process since AgustaWestland has been insisting on it.

?AgustaWestland has since pressed for arbitration and appointed an arbitrator from its side. In view of this, MoD sought afresh the opinion of the Attorney General. With a view to safeguard the interests of the government, MoD has nominated Justice B P Jeevan Reddy as its arbitrator,? the government said.

The government believes that scrapping the contract will ensure minimum loss to the exchequer as India will be able to recover all payments made, with interest, from the manufacturer.

The integrity pact that was signed by AgustaWestland on October 3, 2008 and is also mentioned in the final contract, specifies that the seller cannot employ any individual or firm to intercede on its behalf for an Indian contract.

However, investigations in Italy have determined that the company had in fact appointed at least three middlemen – Christian Michel, Guido Haschke and Carlo Gerosa – to allegedly fix the deal.

The three had allegedly used their contacts in India with politicians, officials as well as the family of former Air Chief S P Tyagi to get crucial technical requirements changed so that the Italian machine could qualify for the contract.

It has been alleged that the testing process was also fixed with the help of the middlemen to ensure that the AW 101 chopper emerged as the winner.

The final push for the defence ministry to terminate the contract came in the form of court documents from Italy where investigators have exposed the alleged money trail and that as much as 51 million euros were paid by AgustaWestland to the three middlemen thorough bogus work contracts.

These contracts included ?media management?, media monitoring as well as software engineering.

India has made two payments for the helicopters. While the first one was 86,439,303 euros or 15 per cent of the value of the contract, the second tranche was for 166,878,607 euros that amounted to 30 per cent of the contract value.

Under procurement rules, the seller had to provide full bank guarantees for the 45 per cent payment already made. The integrity pact also has clauses that make it mandatory for the seller to return all the money paid, along with an interest rate, in case the pact is violated.

They had to protect family: BJP

UNIMPRESSED by the government?s decision to cancel the AgustaWestland VVIP chopper deal over allegations that kickbacks were paid, the BJP Wednesday suggested the move was an attempt to shield people close to the establishment who it said had received bribes.

It demanded the government come clean on the identities of ?AP? and ?FAM? who are accused of being bribed by a key middleman in the deal.

?This is a decision in desperation because serious suspicion was being raised about the involvement of people in the ruling establishment. We want to know what does ?AP? and the family, who are tipped to have got the money, mean,? BJP deputy leader in the Rajya Sabha, Ravi Shankar Prasad, said. ?This question has not been answered yet. It is a rearguard action.?

BJP spokesperson Prakash Javadekar said the UPA government could not hope to shield itself by cancelling the deal.

?This government cannot shield itself by cancelling the deal because we know that this is a government by scam, for scam and of scam. We want to know who is AP and who is the family who have received large amounts,? Javadekar said. As reported by The Indian Express last month, Italian prosecutors produced in court a ?budget? drawn up by two middlemen which purportedly lists initials of Indian politicians and designations of bureaucrats and IAF officers who allegedly had to be ?handled? to fix the deal.

The document is a note Swiss businessman Guido Haschke claimed he wrote during a meeting with British middleman Christian Michel in 2008.

Under the heading ?POL? – Haschke has explained in court this referred to Indian politicians – there is a reference to ?AP? against which ?3 million euro? has been listed.

The other is ?FAM? – explained by Italian investigators in other documents as ?Family? – against which ?15/16 million euro? has been listed. It is not clear if Haschke has explained in court what ?AP? and ?FAM? refer to.

But Haschke, it is believed, has insisted that the reference FAM (family) is to the Tyagi family – three cousins of former Air Chief S P Tyagi – with which he had business relations in the past and who allegedly were partners in the commission on the deal.

Javdekar said the government?s alleged corruption was hurting the country and feared the country may again be forced to pay for the alleged graft in the chopper deal.

?Cancelling deals when it suits will not suffice. Whether it was 2G spectrum allocation, or coal blocks allotment or CWG, the country would not have suffered had they maintained probity in all these cases,? he said.

?In this case, we already have three choppers with the government. We apprehend that they (Augusta) will go for arbitration and the country will be forced to pay through its nose,? Javadekar said.

The BJP had planned to raise this issue in the winter session of Parliament but the government curtailed the session, leaving the BJP fuming.

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First published on: 01-01-2014 at 17:06 IST
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