Helicopter scandal hangs over Cameron’s India visit
INDIA: British Prime Minister David Cameron arrives in
India’s financial hub Mumbai on Monday on a three-day trade-focused visit
clouded by a corruption scandal over British-made helicopters sold to New
Delhi.
Cameron’s trip comes amid a raging scandal over the
procurement of 12 helicopters for use by VIPs in 2010, which were bought for
$748 million (560 million euros) from Anglo-Italian firm AgustaWestland.
After an investigation in Italy suggested kickbacks were
paid via middlemen to secure the deal, India has taken steps to cancel the
contract and has started its own police investigation.
The British Prime Minister is likely to face further
questions about the contract -- the helicopters are being manufactured in
southwest Britain -- with the Indian government keen to be seen to be acting
tough on a new graft scandal.
“We did ask (Britain) in November and they said that since
the Italians are investigating let us await the outcome (of that probe),”
Indian foreign ministry spokesman Syed Akbaruddin told AFP.
Indian investigators will travel to Italy as ealy as this
week as part of an inquiry into the matter, a spokesperson for the Delhi-based
Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) said Sunday.
Cameron, who is accompanied by a large business delegation, will
be far keener to address new areas for trade and investment between Britain and
its former colony, whose economy has slowed sharply but still offers vast
potential.
The British leader has targeted a doubling of trade with
India from 11.5 billion Pounds ($17.8 billion, 13.4 billion euros) in 2010 to
23 billion Pounds by the time he faces re-election in 2015.
After business meetings in Mumbai on Monday, he will fly to
New Delhi for face-to-face talks with Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and
President Pranab Mukherjee on Tuesday.
On his first trip to the country in 2010 after his election,
Cameron pressed the case for the part-British Eurofighter jet, which was
competing to win a $12-billion contract for 126 aircraft.
Last January, India selected a rival French plane, the
Rafale made by Dassault Aviation, but with the deal still not finalised Cameron
is likely to remind the Indian government of the Eurofighter’s merits.
Among his business delegation, executives from the Tesco
supermarket chain are eyeing the retail sector following recent reforms to open
up the market, as are bosses from the banking and insurance world.
AFP
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