India has given $ 5.5 million as defence aid to Tajikistan


Тренировка вертолетчиков Торжокского центра к Параду Победы

© Photo: RIA Novosti

India has given the Ministry of Defence of Tajikistan, a $ 5.5 million aid in military and technical spheres, said the head of the press service of the Tajik Defence Ministry, Faridun Mohamedaliev. One helicopter MI-8 and 6 motor-vehicles, including military trucks and fire engines were given to the Ministry of Defence, said Mohamedaliev .The Minister of Defence of Tajikistan, Sherali Hairulloev,pointed that the military and technical cooperation between the two countries would maintain security in the region. Mohmadaliev added that Tajikistan and India have collaborated in the military and technical field since 2002. Within the frame of this cooperation, the Indian side has reconstructed the military airbase at “Aini” situated 25km to the west of Dushanbe.

TATA’s 155 mm Howitzer / Mounted Gun System


The Tata group unveils India’s first indigenously developed 155 mm howitzer in New Delhi on Monday.

Tata-155mm-HQ

The 155/52 mm howitzer is mounted on an eight-wheeled Tata truck for enhanced mobility. The gun was developed by its defence subsidiary Tata Power Strategic Electronics Division (SED) this year. The ‘mounted gun system’ can fire a six-round salvo on a target 40 km away in less than three minutes.

The truck-mounted howitzer will be displayed at an army seminar at the Maneckshaw centre tomorrow. The rollout comes even as the Indian Army and the Ministry of Defence have struggled to import howitzers over the past 25 years.

The Howitzer has been reportedly developed in collaboration with DENEL, the South African defence equipment manufacturer. The 155mm Howitzer/Mounted Gun System was first displayed in posters at DefExpo 2012 conducted at Pragati Maidan in New Delhi in March this year.

Six defence firms banned for 10 years


Six defence firms, including four from abroad, named in a CBI chargesheet in a graft case involving a former Ordnance Factory Board (OFB) chief, were banned March 5 from doing business in India for the next 10 years.

Singapore Technologies, Israeli Military Industries, Germany’s Rheinmetall Air Defence and Corporation Defence Russia, as also two Indian firms, were debarred from dealing with the OFB, defence production department and the defence ministry. The Indian firms facing the action are New Delhi-based T.S. Kishan and Company Private Limited and Ludhiana-based R.K. Machine Tools Limited.

“The defence ministry today (Monday) decided to debar six firms from from further business dealings with the Ordnance Factory Board, Department of Defence Production, MoD, for a period of 10 years,” defence ministry spokesperson Sitanshu Kar said in an official statement here.

The action is a consequence of the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) chargesheet against former OFB director general Sudipto Ghosh, and the probe agency’s recommendation for blacklisting the six firms. The CBI had filed the chargesheet against Ghosh and several others involved in the graft case in June 2010.

“The firms were recommended for blacklisting by the CBI on the basis of evidence collected against them,” Kar said.

“These firms were issued notice to show cause as to why action against them should not be taken consequent to the filing of the charge sheet in the case related to illegal gratification against Ghosh and others.

“The decision to debar them was taken today after taking into consideration their replies,” Kar added.

The government had in June 2009 decided to put on hold all defence dealings with these companies that were named by the CBI in the graft case against Ghosh and recommended to the defence ministry that they be blacklisted.

However, some of the firms appeled and the Delhi High Court quashed the order, noting that principles of natural justice were not followed by providing the companies an opportunity to be heard.

The government then issued show cause notices to the firms. After receiving their replies to the notice, the decision to ban them was taken.

As Bofors and Denel, two producers of artillery guns, were already banned in India, there were apprehensions in 2009 that halting defence business dealings with some of the firms, particularly STK and IMI, would impact the Indian Army’s artillery modernisation programme.

At that time, the STK was ahead for the army’s over $1 billion order for 155mm ultr- light howitzers for mountain deployment. Since then, India had decided to buy 145 of the M777 guns from BAE Systems through the foreign military sales route from the US.

The IMI had, in April 2009, won a $300 million contract for building a chain of ordnance factories in Nalanda, Bihar, to manufacture ammunition for Bofors 155mm guns. The decision to debar IMI has resulted in the project being adversely affected.

T.S. Kishan and Company manufactures explosive shells for the 155mm Bofors guns through a tie-up with OFB.

R.K. Machine Tools is a supplier of components to the OFB such as 120mm shells and 155mm ammunition and flares for the artillery guns.

(IANS)