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KIA - Make In India


Raaz@NBK

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8 minutes ago, BalayyaTarak said:

Too much, e state lo em jarigina credit motham Modi kivvala.

cheppu teesuku xxxxxi okkokka xxxxni, eelu illa pakkalese buddulu edo central govt sanction chesina projectslaga

congress lo vundi state ni m kudipindhi, ippudu bjp loki velli adhe pani chestundi . she will be shown the door after 2019 as bjp will get less than 1 lakh votes in total ap 

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32 minutes ago, ravindras said:

congress lo vundi state ni m kudipindhi, ippudu bjp loki velli adhe pani chestundi . she will be shown the door after 2019 as bjp will get less than 1 lakh votes in total ap 

I am just not talking about her, sagam BJP manda antha alane unnaru.

 

Vaapuni chusi balupu ani anukuntunnaru, 2019 should teach them a lesson and Modi and Shah gadi doola teeripovali for his head weight and crooked politics.

All allies should support NDA only if Modi is not PM candidate post elections.

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1 hour ago, BalayyaTarak said:

Too much, e state lo em jarigina credit motham Modi kivvala.

cheppu teesuku xxxxxi okkokka xxxxni, eelu illa pakkalese buddulu edo central govt sanction chesina projectslaga

Intha digajarindi enti eevida!? Nela baaru rajakeeyalu!

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EW DELHI: India’s entire weapons acquisitions process is badly broken and beset with huge delays, says an internal defence ministry report, pointing out that only 8-10% of 144 proposed deals in the last three financial years fructified within the stipulated time periods.

The scathing power-point presentation, prepared by junior defence minister Subhash Bhamre for Prime Minister Narendra Modi late last year, says the arms procurement process is dogged by “multiple and diffused structures with no single-point accountability”, duplication of processes, avoidable redundant layers doing the same thing again and again, delayed execution, no real-time monitoring and no project-based approach, among other things, said sources.

Also Read: ‘Make In India’ projects come undone
 
 
 
“The presentation said there is a tendency to find faults rather than to facilitate the process,” said a source. Consequently, the entire 'Make in India' policy in the defence production sector continues to languish due to procedural delays, without taking off in any concrete manner. Cognisance should be taken of the “hard, uncomfortable facts” to ensure “correctives” are put in place, with proper responsibility and accountability being fixed, says the presentation.
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The MoD on Monday refused to say anything on the issue, and messages to Bhamre went unanswered. But the fact remains that no major 'Make in India’ defence project has actually kicked off in the last three to four years due to lack of requisite political push and follow-through, bureaucratic bottlenecks and long-winded procedures, commercial and technical squabbles, as was first reported by TOI in October last year.
 
 

From fighters, drones and helicopters to submarines, minesweepers and artillery howitzers, the armed forces continue to grapple with major operational gaps due to the convoluted procurement procedures and the lack of adequate modernisation budgets in the face of ballooning pay and pension bills.

The internal MoD presentation points out that the crippling delays, which begin right from the formulation of technical requirements in the tenders through the SQRs (staff qualitative requirements) to the final approval by the competent financial authority like the Cabinet Committee on Security, amount to 2.6 to 15.4 times the laid down deadlines for various projects.

It takes around 120 weeks on an average to clear files after a tender or RFP (request for proposal) is finalised, which is six times the laid-down norm by the MoD in 2016. In one particular case, it took almost eight years for this to happen. Similarly, the contract negotiation committee (CNC) stage witnesses delays about 10 times more than what is allowed.

The lack of synergy among the Army, Navy, IAF and Coast Guard, who often pull in different directions, as well as the tendency of the different departments within the MoD to work in “independent silos” are the other factors that impede military modernisation, said the sources
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