Sanjay Bhandari, sues French firm for unpaid ‘fee’
London - Sanjay
Bhandari, an accused arms dealer wanted in India on money laundering and tax
evasion charges, is pursuing a separate legal battle of his own in France over
an alleged unpaid cut from a large Indian defence contract dating back over 10
years, according to a UK media report.
Bhandari, 59, has filed a case against French defence major
Thales Group demanding he be paid his full “consultancy fee” of EURO 20 million
for his role as an intermediary in winning the company an estimated EURO 2.4
billion contract to modernise the Mirage 2000 fleet of fighter jets for the
Indian Air Force (IAF), ‘The Daily Telegraph’ newspaper reported this week.
Thales firmly denies any such agreement or contract with the
Indian businessman, who describes himself as a “well-known commercial
intermediary involved in arms and defence in India” in court papers filed at
the Tribunal de Commerce in Nanterre, near Paris, seen by the newspaper.
Bhandari, who is currently on conditional bail in Britain
ahead of an extradition hearing expected to begin in London on February 21, is
also said to have applied for political asylum claiming persecution by the
BJP-led government due to his links to the Opposition Congress Party.
The case comes at a time when Thales, as part of a French
consortium, are negotiating with the Indian government to sell more Rafale
military jets, with a deal for the supply of 36 Rafale-B and Rafale-C jets for
the IAF nearing completion.
According to the newspaper report, Bhandari alleges that
from 2008 he helped Thales sell the upgrade of the Mirage jets by facilitating
a meeting with an Indian defence ministry official.
He claims to have helped the company clinch the deal to
modernise the Mirage 2000 fleet of fighter jets that India had bought from
France in 1982 but was paid only EURO 9 million of the EURO 20 million agreed.
In court papers, Bhandari claims he had “a longstanding
commercial relationship” with Thales since 1996 and helped set up a key meeting
in Paris following which in July 2011 Thales and Dassault won the Indian
government contract.
In his petition, Bhandari claims that he was told by a
Thales India official about an elaborate financial covert scheme in India and
Dubai which enabled the payment of secret commissions to intermediaries. This
arrangement was presented as being a standard practice within the Thales group
for the payment of commercial intermediation services, taking into account the
regulations in force in France, the claim reads.
The petition also alleges that in order to pay the
commissions to Bhandari, Thales awarded offset contracts to two companies based
in Bangalore. “The companies would retain about 25 per cent of the price paid
by Thales for services that could materialise in engineering or consulting,”
says the newspaper report.
A spokesperson for Thales confirmed that Bhandari had filed
a petition against Thales SA in a commercial court in June last year for the
settlement of sums “allegedly due to him on an aeronautical modernisation
project”.
“Thales firmly denies the claims by Mr Sanjay Bhandari
regarding the sums allegedly due or any other payments to him by Thales SA,” a
spokesperson for Thales told PTI.
“Thales has never signed a contract with Mr Bhandari or his
companies in connection with this project. Thales complies with the law and
applies a zero tolerance policy on corruption and influence peddling. The
Group’s integrity programme is regularly evaluated and amended to reflect
changes in applicable legislation and best practices,” the spokesperson said.
Meanwhile, Bhandari is sought by the Central Bureau of
Investigation (CBI) and the Enforcement Directorate (ED) for prosecution for
money laundering contrary to the Prevention of Money Laundering Act 2002, with
two extradition requests related to money laundering and the second to tax
evasion.
The Indian government’s extradition request for Bhandari had
been certified by UK Home Secretary Priti Patel on June 16 and he was arrested
a month later in London on July 15, 2020. He appeared at initial hearings in
the case at Westminster Magistrates’ Court in London last year, with a full
extradition hearing scheduled between February 21 and March 9. PTI AK ZH AKJ ZH
ZH.
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