KATHMANDU: Days ahead of Nepal Prime Minister Pushpa Kamal Dahal’s scheduled India visit, reports have emerged suggesting that the Nepal Army plans to procure 26 armoured personnel carriers (APCs) worth NPR (Nepalese Rupee) 6 billion from China’s North Industries Group Corporation Limited (Norinco).
The APCs are to be used by the Nepali peacekeepers deployed in various peacekeeping missions, The Kathmandu Post reported. However, Nepal Army has dismissed the reports.
The problem is that the Chinese firm Norinco was sanctioned by the US Department of the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) in November 2022. Reportedly, the deal also included the procurement of 10,000 CQ, the 5.56 mm version rifles, from the same Chinese company.
The national army was all set to procure the 26 APCs from China via the Nepal Army Welfare Fund, a decision which was taken when Sher Bahadur Deuba was the Prime Minister and also overseeing the defence ministry, The Kathmandu Post reported.
The Kathmandu Post is Nepal’s leading English-language daily launched in February 1993 as Nepal’s first private-run English-language broadsheet. The Post is the second-most widely read paper in Nepal after its sister publication, the Nepali-language Kantipur Daily.
The ‘listing date’ of the APC deal was June 3, 2021, and the ‘divestment date’ for the procurement was June 3, 2022, according to a document the Post saw. Although the Nepal Army or the government of Nepal have to put in the money initially, the UN peacekeeping office will reimburse the money to the army after the APCs are delivered and come into operation.
Now, the Nepal Army and the local Himalayan Bank, from where the army was all set to deposit the money to open the letters of credit (LCs) via Nepal Rastra Bank, are in a fix after coming to know that the Chinese state-owned company is on the US sanction list and there is no clarity over the possible ramifications if the APCs are indeed bought from the company.
Speaking at a function on Friday, Nepal’s Chief of Army Staff General Prabhu Ram Sharma said the army does not require any weapons as such at the moment, but it may need some vehicle parts. He didn’t elaborate, The Kathmandu Post reported.
“We are not procuring any weapons for the Nepali peacekeepers who are deployed in the UN missions, but, as per the requirement, some study might be undertaken to procure some vehicle parts from a nearby market at an affordable price”, said Sharma.
“The Nepal Army has enough weapons in stock,” Sharma said in Kavre after marking the International Day of United Nations Peacekeepers. “There is no need to procure weapons”, he said.
After the then Defence Minister Deuba had given his go-ahead, the army started negotiations with suppliers in India and China and decided to procure 26 APCs from China and four from India. But the price between the Indian and Chinese APCs was vastly different, said an official privy to the procurement process.
“An APC costs around Rs 40 million in India, while a similar one that also met the US standards fetched Rs 77 million in China. There was some serious homework earlier regarding the procurement of the 26 APCs from China”, said two officials in the army and the defence ministry who are privy to the development.
The army submitted all documents at the Himalayan Bank on April 17, including personal invoices and performer contracts, The Kathmandu Post reported.
Three Nepal Army Generals, Pradip Jung K C, Santosh Ballav Paydual and Tikaram Gurung, have signed the document, according to those familiar with the procurement process, requesting the bank to open a letter of credit.
After political pressure on the army not to procure the APCs from China on the eve of the Nepal Prime Minister’s India visit, and as the Chinese company was found to be blacklisted by the Americans, the bank has halted the LC process.
With the army determined to buy the APCs from China, Prime Minister Pushpa Kamal Dahal summoned Deputy Prime Minister and Defence Minister Purna Bahadur Khadka and General Sharma and advised them not to do so at a time he is going on a state visit to India, The Kathmandu Post reported.
According to a leader close to Dahal, the PM also said that given the country’s economic problems, this is not a good time to buy arms and ammunition, and it will not look good on the government. Moreover, if the procurement issue lands in Parliament, it will create an uproar and eventually, the government will be compelled to cancel the deal.
However, the army was adamant about its decision to procure the APCs from China and, on May 18, it signed an agreement with Norinco to buy an ammunition plant worth Rs 700 million. As per a May 23 decision, and in a separate deal, the army is also planning to buy CQ, a 5.56 mm version rifles and spending Rs 100 million for it soon, the final agreement for which will be reached in June, said two knowledgeable sources from the Nepal Army and the Defense ministry.
On the other hand, on Monday, the army deposited some initial amount at the Himalayan Bank to open the letter of credit, but after it emerged that the Chinese firm was sanctioned and blacklisted, the process has been halted but not terminated, according to the defence ministry officials.
Even though the process of procuring the APCs has been stopped for now, it can be resumed anytime, even during the upcoming visit of General Sharma to China in June-end or July, said the officials who are following the issue, The Kathmandu Post reported.
Prakash Poudel, spokesman for the Ministry of Defence, told the Post that the army had planned to procure the APCs but he does not know about the plan’s current status. As security agencies procure arms and ammunition through a separate law, the public procurement law does not bind them, The Kathmandu Post reported.
But a senior official at the Nepal Rastra Bank said that the army knows how to circumvent such sanctions. “Earlier too, the Nepal Army has made similar attempts to procure and get supplies in a safe way”, said the Nepal Rastra Bank official.
But a former defence secretary said that the “US could create problems for Nepali peacekeepers if we procure the APCs and other military supplies from a blacklisted Chinese company”. Norinco, he said, is also involved in providing arms and ammunition to Myanmar’s government which is under global sanctions.
The US is the biggest contributor to the UN peacekeeping missions, accounting for 27.89 per cent of the total contribution, followed by China (15.21 per cent). Seven of the Top 10 contributors to the missions are from the Western bloc that closely works with the Americans.
After some national and international media outlets started reporting on how the Nepal Army was going to procure arms and ammunition from China, the army chief came to its defence on Friday, saying the army has no plans to get weapons from China.
“We have not procured any weapons from China after 1989-1990. If the Nepal Army needs to buy weapons, it takes prior approval of the government and will only move forward as per the (national) Acts, policies and rules. We have not opened a letter of credit to procure weapons”, said General Sharma, The Kathmandu Post reported.
Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Defence, Purna Bahadur Khadka, also dismissed reports about the procurement of weapons from China. Nepal Army spokesman Brigadier General Krishna Prasad Bhandari also claimed that the army has no plans to procure more weapons and that the force has not communicated with anyone on the front. (ANI)