What's new

Army never purchased drone from us, says Mumbai firm

Joined
Mar 27, 2015
Messages
2,074
Reaction score
-16
Country
India
Location
India
drone.jpg


A day after the Pakistani Army released pictures recovered from a memory chip of a quadcopter which it said was flown by Indian agencies allegedly for espionage, the Mumbai-based company from whom the unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) was reportedly purchased has claimed that the Indian Army never bought it from them. Amit Nichani, the owner of Ascom System Pvt Ltd, told The Indian Express Tuesday that since he was not a registered vendor with the Ministry of Defence, the claims by the Pakistani Army that it might have been purchased from Ascom did not hold ground.

“The defence ministry purchases equipment only from its registered vendors. I am not on the vendors’ list of the Indian Army and therefore I have not sold any quadcopter, which the Pakistani Army claims to have shot down on July 15 on suspicion of spying on its soil,” he said. “These quadcopters are easily available on online shopping portals and could have been ordered from there,” Nichani added.

The pictures released by Pakistan show the wreckage of Phantom 3, a quadcopter manufactured by DJI. While the craft has been claimed to be brought down on July 15, the pictures from the memory chip recovered from the craft were released on Monday when Gurdaspur witnessed a terror attack suspected to have been carried out by the Lashkar-E-Taiba. Ascom is the one of the two registered vendors of DJI in India. “While there are over 500 dealers selling Phantom 3, we are a registered dealer and therefore dragging our name adds more authenticity to their claims,” said Nichani.

“Reading data from a memory card does not require forensic expertise. If the data were genuine, they could have provided it on the day the quadcopter was shot down. Why has the Pakistan Army taken 10 days to retrieve or read data from a memory chip,” he asked. Nichani said he felt it was a “cooked up story to divert attention from Pakistan-sponsored terrorism in Punjab yesterday”. “Why have they revealed the pictures on the same day of Punjab terrorist attack. There is a possibility that the quadcopter could had been purchased by Pakistani authorities through their authorised dealers and flown by them over the Indian side,” Amit said.

DJI also has two registered vendors in Pakistan. On the issue of one of the pictures showing his Sakinaka office, Nichani said it could have been picked up from the company’s website. “In the gallery section of the website, there are a few pictures of the office. The picture shared by the Pakistani authorities could have been picked up from there,” he said. A staff member at Ascom told The Indian Express that the man visible in the picture was a client but they had not been able to locate him. “We don’t have a CCTV camera inside our office and therefore are not able to ascertain when he visited our office.

We have seen him a couple of times but since we are not able to locate his KYCs, we are not able to locate him,” said the employee who did not want to be named. Nichani also claimed that quadcopters were not for military application. “Though GPS-enabled, a quadcopter is a manual craft and its movements have to be regulated by a joystick. The GPS is to facilitate the craft to ‘hold’ a position in case the connection between the craft and the remote is lost. Also, in case the wind conditions are very strong, a GPS-enabled quadcopter adjusts its four wheels and remains stoic at a position till the time the flyer gives a command as to which direction it should fly,” he demonstrated using a Phantom 3 quadcopter.

“The craft can fly only for 15 minutes and can cover a radius of 600 metres. The 15 minutes are divided into two halves with the craft set to return to the home position. The aircraft does not have flying capacity required by defence agencies,” said Nichani. While the use of unmanned flying objects is banned in the country, its sale has not been regulated. A public notice issued by the Director General of Civil Aviation in October 2014 reads, “DGCA is in the process of formulating the regulations (and globally harmonize those) for certification & operation for use of UAS in the Indian Civil Airspace. Till such regulations are issued, no non government agency, organisation, or an individual will launch a UAS in Indian Civil Airspace for any purpose whatsoever.”

Posted in India
Army never purchased drone from us, says Mumbai firm | idrw.org
 
. . .
Lousy Indian "huga ka huga huka huka" justifications. Mentally, are you still living in caves or you think you would not be seen living in caves with idiotic statements like these?
 
.
Lousy Indian "huga ka huga huka huka" justifications. Mentally, are you still living in caves or you think you would not be seen living in caves with idiotic statements like these?


another stupid argument.. no idiotic statements are yours... Armed forces will avoid Chinese mal, we are aware that chinese might spy on us.. if we use their toys... such foolish arguments... that drone can be controlled within 2km radius not beyond... how can it deep penetrate inside pakistan side??? PA bring such arguments on the day, in the event of attack in Punjab...
 
.
Ahh India unwanted news!

Still Pakistan can have the shot down drone as a gift!
 
.
Lousy Indian "huga ka huga huka huka" justifications. Mentally, are you still living in caves or you think you would not be seen living in caves with idiotic statements like these?
Chinese authority of drone manufacturer even said Indian army never purchased such.As usual Pakistani battle cry of chronic masturbator...Even a khilona fall out of the sky you blame India..sick people
 
.
Chinese authority of drone manufacturer even said Indian army never purchased such.As usual Pakistani battle cry of chronic masturbator...Even a khilona fall out of the sky you blame India..sick people

Firstly your "civilized" wordings is reported.

We'r showing you video evidence with images, faces, and looking down shots of Indian military bases. Now you want to sell us a story that this was a Pakistani drone which went inside Indian drone making company, took shots of faces, the door-way and then flew above Indian base and later on when it entered its "home" back, Pakistan shot it and stated crying foul? Really? For Real? You mean honestly you'r not living mentally in a cave and we wouldn't notice your craziness?

Company never said they are not their images but denied they didn't sell them to Indian Army - okay - lets take that on its face-value but look what's happening. You'r saying that the knife was not purchased by you but there is no question that it was in your hand and you'r caught red-handed. We'll figure out who purchased the knife but it doesn't render you innocent if the company says it never sold that drone to you.
 
.

:lol: Are you for real? Good enough that it was Mumbai firm, you seriously think they would have screwed there army? also i do not think Pakistan army bought it from you people either so where the hell it came from??

Man it is people like you who really ridicule a massive number of sensible Indian members here. :lol:
 
.
Uncle thing is,, it would be better if you keep the discussion in that "other thread" to that thread rather then bull shitting here... wont it be nice and useful for everyone? Rather, if you can consider, why even bother pollute that thread because you post gives us a good idea of what you can contribute there,,, or not!
 
.
The ''D'' in India must be for denial. Regardless how many times the Indians have been humiliated, they will always come out with an excuse or deny the incidents. In either case, it suits us fine as at the end of the day, while we keep scoring the kills, the Indian armed forces keep fooling their public by creating stories and at the end of the day Justice Katju feels even more satisfied with his findings.

128b6689309a5273cd108ac7ecb18770-jpg.101819


Ov_Gnat02.jpg


2581038551_d7f3c61a84_b.jpg


wreckage-1.jpg


kargilvictory.jpg


inp-27-53-1.jpg




Pakistan forces Indian helicopter to land| Reuters
 
. . .

Pakistan Defence Latest Posts

Country Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom