According to a media report, British defence major, Rolls
Royce, may have paid around 10 mn pounds to land a contract for engines on Hawk
aircrafts.
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 compnay 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. -HT

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