Philippines questions Indian missile technology

By News Report
April 07, 2022
Indian missile Brahmos - the same which was said to have accidentally been fired into Pakistan. Photo: Twitter

NEW DELHI: The Philippines has asked New Delhi for a clarification on the BrahMos missile it is buying from India days after the defence ministry admitted to a missile having been accidentally fired into Pakistan, foreign media reported.

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Indian ambassador to the Philippines, Shambhu S. Kumaran, said this in the course of a virtual talk on the partnership between the two countries organised by the Ananta Centre on April 5.

Asked if there had been concern in Manila over the accidental firing, Kumaran said that he had to address the issue with the country’s defence secretary.

“Yes, I did have an opportunity to interact with [Philippines] defence secretary [Delfin Negrillo] Lorenzana and I clarified and our Ministry of Defence clarified…there was…I wouldn’t describe it as concern…there was obviously a query and we responded with the fact that there was no technical issue as far as we could understand it. And there is a technical inquiry underway and we could have that cleared up once the information is available,” Kumaran said.

Lorenzana was the official who signed the $375-million (Rs69.5 billion) deal for the Philippine Marines, with India’s BrahMos Aerospace, for the former to acquire three batteries of the BrahMos cruise missile.

India had called the deal – signed earlier this year – its first for a major weapon system. The Philippines is the first country to buy the BrahMos missile. On March 11, Ministry of Defence announced that the “high speed flying object” that Pakistan had earlier said entered its airspace on March 9, was in fact a missile that had been “accidentally fired” due to a “technical malfunction.”

In the talk, Kumaran was also asked if there was concern in Manila over the fact that the BrahMos missiles are made jointly by Russia – facing heightened global censure in the light of its attack on Ukraine.

“I think it’s very important for us to maintain the fact that this is an India-Philippines transaction… I don’t want to downplay the fact that the weapons system is jointly developed and manufactured by Russia and India. And there is a strong element of Russia’s support in the system, but definitely, this is an India-Philippines transaction. I do believe and am quite confident that we’ll be able to move ahead on that basis, on a bilateral basis,” Kumaran said in reply.

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