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Indian Court Agrees to Hear Review Petition in Rafale Sleaze Case Against Gov't

© AFP 2023 / ANNE-CHRISTINE POUJOULAT French Rafale fighter aircrafts come back aboard the French Charles-de-Gaulle aircraft carrier, after flights on November 23, 2015 at eastern Mediterranean sea, as part of operation Chammal in Syria and Irak against the Islamic State group
French Rafale fighter aircrafts come back aboard the French Charles-de-Gaulle aircraft carrier, after flights on November 23, 2015 at eastern Mediterranean sea, as part of operation Chammal in Syria and Irak against the Islamic State group - Sputnik International
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India's top court has decided to review its 14 December 2018 judgement, in which it exonerated Modi's government of blame in the multi-billion dollar Rafale fighter jet deal. This development is expected to provide salvo to the opposition Congress party against Modi during the seven-stage national election process, which starts Thursday.

New Delhi (Sputnik): In a major setback for the Indian government, the Supreme Court of India on Wednesday agreed to hear a review petition based on the "stolen documents" published in an Indian newspaper pertaining to the $8.7 billion Rafale fighter jet deal. The country's former foreign minister Yashwant Sinha had filed a review petition against the 14 December 2018 judgement of the Supreme Court, which had upheld the deal for the purchase of 36 Rafale jets.

READ MORE: Relief for Indian Gov't as Supreme Court Refuses to Order Probe in Rafale Deal

The court, headed by Chief Justice of India Ranjan Gogoi, unanimously dismissed the government's objection, citing ‘privilege over documents' used by petitioners to seek a review of the December 2018 judgement. The public prosecutor K. K. Venugopal had submitted that the review petition was based on ‘stolen' Rafale documents and as such, was not admissible as evidence.

​"We deem it proper to dismiss the preliminary objections to hold and affirm that the review petitions will be adjudicated on their merits on the basis of the relevance of the three documents whose admissibility was questioned by the respondents (government)," Chief Justice Gogoi announced, reading from the judgement that he and Justice S. K. Kaul wrote together.

A Rafale multi-role combat aircraft - Sputnik International
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​The daily publication The Hindu had published a series of reports written by editor N. Ram alleging massive irregularities in fixing the price of the deal and bestowing offsetting contracts to the private defence firm Reliance. The media reports were based on defence deal contract papers that the government has alleged were ‘stolen documents'.

The Supreme Court has not determined a date for its next hearing. As per the order, every published document, including those in possession of the media daily The Hindu would be examined afresh.

Earlier, the government had urged the court to dismiss the plea as the documents were ‘unauthorised photocopies from the originals' kept with the Ministry of Defence, which had sneaked into the public domain. The government pleaded that national security was at stake and that the leak of documents amounted to an offence under the Official Secrets Act.

On 14 December 2018, the Supreme Court of India exonerated the government in response to several petitions that had sought a court-monitored probe into the purchase of the Rafale jet fighters. The petitioners had alleged that the contract was awarded to Dassault Aviation in exchange for contracts with certain industry players purportedly favoured by Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

READ MORE: India Makes $4 Bln Down Payment for Rafale Jets Despite Controversy– Sources

The Indian government, led by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, had concluded a $8.7 billion deal with the French Government in 2016 to purchase 36 Rafale fighter jets under a government-to-government contract agreement. Indian opposition parties have been demanding a probe into the whole affair. According to them, the price of fighter jets under the concluded deal was inflated and the Indian government had favoured a private company as one of the key beneficiaries of the deal.

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