Dassault "freely" chose Reliance for Rafale partnership

ANI  |  Saint Cloud [France] 

clarified on Wednesday that it had "freely chosen" India's for a partnership to set up joint-venture Reliance Ltd (DRAL) to manufacture parts for and business jets.

The company also mentioned that it created the joint venture to deliver the offsets committed to "In compliance with the Indian regulations (Defence Procurement Procedure) and as frequent with such a contract, Dassault has committed to offsets in worth 50 percent of the value of the purchase", the release read. "In order to deliver some of these offsets, Dassault has decided to create a joint venture. has freely chosen to make a partnership with India's Reliance Group", they further added while stating that DRAL was created on February 10, 2017.

The statement further stated that the was informed about the creation of DRAL on May 11, 2017 by the Loik Segalen, in compliance with French regulations.

Dassault also said that "negotiations are ongoing with a hundred-odd other potential partners" and also confirmed that other partnerships have been signed with companies like "BTSL, DEFSYS, Kinetic, Mahindra, Maini, SAMTEL."

They also clarified that the in Nagpur, the cornerstone of which was laid down on October 27, 2017, will manufacture parts for business jets and "in a second step", parts for They confirmed that the first parts will be delivered by the end of this year, adding that an initial team of Indian managers and skilled workers were trained in for the

The Rafale jets were chosen during the (UPA) tenure in 2012. Initially, India had planned to buy 18 off-the-shelf jets from France, with 108 others to be assembled in the country by the state-run and defence company (HAL).

However, in 2015, the Centre led by scrapped the UPA's plan and announced that it would buy 36 "ready-to-fly" Rafale jets instead of seeking a from France's and making the aircraft in India. The deal was signed in the year 2016.

The has been alleging that the Democratic Alliance (NDA) government has been procuring each aircraft at a cost of over Rs 1,670 crore as against Rs 526 crore finalised by the then UPA government.

The controversy took a new twist recently after former French Hollande, with whom the deal was cleared, claimed that the had proposed Reliance Defence's name as the offset partner for

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First Published: Thu, October 11 2018. 09:35 IST