PAC raps Def Min over ‘delay’ in inducting trainer aircraft

NEW DELHI, Mar 21: The Defence Ministry was today pulled up by a Parliamentary panel for “inordinate delay” in the induction of indigenous basic trainer aircraft and its failure to foresee implication of this on defence preparedness.

In its report on the training of pilots in IAF, the Public Accounts Committee said it is “distressed on the inordinate delay in induction of trainer aircraft, both imported as well as indigenously manufactured, and the inability of the Defence Ministry to foresee implication of such delay on our defence preparedness.”

“Worse, the inordinate delay in indigenisation of trainer aircraft after approval of design and development in June 2011 led to cost escalation which cannot be condoned or overlooked considering the dire need of such aircraft in the IAF,” it said.

The PAC asked the Ministry to show a “sense of urgency and finalise the proposal for production of 106 indigenous Basic Trainer Aircraft with the Hindustan Aeronautics Limited (HAL) at the earliest.”

The Ministry said the HAL has submitted a proposal for production of 106 indigenous Basic Trainer Aircraft at the cost of Rs 568.08 crore in June 2011 but it requested for revised cost of Rs 659.46 crore.

“Considering the high estimated cost as worked out on the basis of the detailed project report submitted by the HAL, the proposal was being reviewed by the Ministry,” it told the PAC.

The PAC said it was perturbed on the silence of the Ministry over the finalisation of contract for the Intermediate Jet Trainer and asked it to firm up a contract with HAL in this regard with stipulated time-lines.

The PAC in another report on the delays in setting up ordnance factory in Nalanda, asked the Ministry to take remedial measures to prevent acts of ommissions and commissions.

“Without these remedial measures, future defence procurements will continue to be clogged with ommissions and commissions leading to scams to the grave peril of the nation,” it said.

The PAC was referring to the cancellation of the contract for setting up the Ordnance Factory in Nalanda with the IMI of Israel, which has been blacklisted for its role in the Ordnance Factory scam of 2005.

The PAC said responsibility should be fixed on persons responsible for brazen project management bordering on callousness leading to undue delay in setting up the facility.

“We regret that the Ministry is conspicuously silent on glaring instances of mismanagement in such an important and vital project… We desire that a specific time-line should be fixed, within which the Ordnance Factory Project, Nalanda should be completed and operationalised,” it said.

On a report on supply chain management of rations in the Army, PAC noted that the Army has ordered an independent survey by the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR) and the Defence Institute of Physiology and Allied Sciences to suggest alteration in rations for jawans.

“We regret that the survey is still under the consideration of Ministry, though assurance to that effect was given in 2011,” he said. (PTI)_