Saturday, March 31, 2012

Indian Ordnance Factories is a giant industrial setup which functions under the Department of De fence Production of the Ministry of Defence. Indian Ordnance Factories, headquartered at Kolkata, is a conglomerate of 39 Factories, 9 Training Institutes, 3 Regional Marketing Centers and 4 Regional Controller of Safety.
Today OFB along with its 39 factories spread over India provide
  • a broad and versatile production base with multi-technology capabilities
  • state of the art manufacturing facilities
  • large reservoir of skilled and professionally qualified manpower and managerial personnel
  • strict adherence to quality standard (all the units are ISO-9000 certified)
  • original as well as adaptive research & development to make need based refinement and modifications
  • project engineering capability
  • a strong base for industrial training facilities
  • ready market access due to convenient location

Geographical Spread

There are 39 Ordnance Factories geographically distributed all over the country at 24 different locations. A visual idea of how our factories and headquarters are distributed can be had from our location map.
Name of State/ Union Territory Number of factories
Maharashtra 10
Uttar Pradesh 8
Madhya Pradesh 6
Tamil Nadu 6
West Bengal 4
Uttaranchal 2
Andhra Pradesh 1
Chandigarh 1
Orissa 1
The 40th Factory is started at Nalanda in Bihar.and 41 is at Korba, UP

Our Product Range

Items produced in Ordnance Factories are highly sophisticated and complex in nature. Also the range of products is simply astonishing. Our products, as is evident from the list below, span across a wide and exhaustive range of requirements of any armed forces.
For details see Products.

Technology

Our products must be safe in handling, reliable and perform consistently during actual operation with equal efficiency under varying and extreme conditions of climate. The plant and technologies have been so chosen as to ensure high degree of quality and reliability and is a unique blend of old and the most modern stae-of-the-art CNC technologies. The manufacturing process covers wide spectrum of engineering - Mechanical, Electrical, Metallurgical, Chemical, Textile, Leather, Optics and Electronics.
It is our endeavour to manufacture world class products without compromising with the safety aspects of products and processes. Adherence to safety standards is given highest priority and a well laid down safety norm as well as diaster management plan exists in the organisation.

Customers

The prime customers of Indian Ordnance Factories are the Indian Armed Forces. Apart from supplying armaments to the Armed Forces, Ordnance Factories also meet the requirement of other customers viz. Central Paramilitary Forces and State Police Forces in respect of Arms, Ammunition, Clothings, Bullet Proof Vehicles and Mine Protected Vehicles etc. Increase in volume of Export, as an extension to its functioning remains an important objective of Ordnance Factories.

Arms procurement not foolproof and self-reliant

April 1, 2012

Former Army chief Gen Ved Prakash Malik, under whose command the Kargil war was successfully fought, asserts incumbent Army chief Gen V K Singh’s written communiqué on military’s operational capabilities is something many Army chiefs have done in the past. In a candid interview to Deccan Herald Principal Correspondent Gautam Dheer, Gen Malik lamented the poor track record of the 5-year Defence Planning and its implementation. He strongly maintained that the rot is about lack of accountability and fear of CAG, CVC and the CBI. He says its not possible for any nation with 70 per cent dependency on imports for defence equipment to improve its defence capabilities. Excerpts of the interview:

The revelations in the Army chief’s letter to the PM tend to expose country’s military strengths to hostile nations and dampen the morale of citizens and soldiers?


It is the responsibility of the Chiefs to keep the political leadership informed about the operational capabilities of his force. This is done frequently in conferences and sometimes through letters. But the details are not made public as that exposes defence weaknesses of the nation to a likely adversary and affects the morale of the citizens and soldiers.
In the present instance, it would be wrong to blame the Army chief for making his letter public. He has done (written) what many of us did in the past. And every Chief realises the implications of such correspondence falling into public domain. The leak appears to be somewhere else.

As a former decorated Army chief, how do you see the current rows involving the incumbent Army chief and others?


It is unfortunate, sad and undesirable! This row and the resultant atmosphere created in the country is in no one’s interest. It is doing much harm to the otherwise high image of the Army and the institution of the Army chief. It is also adversely affecting the image of the defence minister and the Government of India, particularly the Ministry of Defence. It is definitely not in national interest and needs to be plugged soonest.

Has Gen Singh’s assessment of operational capabilities been a cause of concern since long, given that India‘s defence capabilities have grown over the years?

Operational capabilities of the armed forces in terms of weapons and equipment have always been affected due to lack of self-reliance in the country and the long periods it takes to procure these items. It is not just the budget. It is more due to cumbersome procurement procedures, lack of accountability and transparency, friction between service headquarters and the Defence Ministry staff, and the fear of CAG, CVC and the CBI. We have an extremely poor track record of 5-Year Defence Planning and its implementation.
This perpetual problem has always been a cause of big worry for the services chiefs who have the ultimate responsibility of fighting and winning a war. You will recall that even during Kargil war, when questioned by the media, I responded that ‘we shall fight with whatever we have’. We must remember that it is not possible for any nation, which has 70 per cent dependency on imports of defence equipment, to improve its defence capabilities when the crisis is on.

So far as the public is concerned, we must realise that for very long we had kept all aspects of defence planning under wraps. This has led to lack of awareness. We have made no serious efforts to correct our systems. There is hardly any expertise on this important issue at the political level.

Do you recall any kickbacks or bribe offer during your tenure as indicated by the present Army chief?

The arms trade, all over the world, is extremely competitive and also unethical. You have touts, dealers, corrupt officials and leaders. Sometimes, even political leaders turn into lobbyists for manufacturers of their country. The manufacturers and dealers often try to offer kickbacks and bribes to people whom they consider vulnerable. During my tenure, we had strict procedures for the entry of arms vendors in Army Headquarters and keeping a record of what transpires when some such person meets a military officer. In any case, most of them went to the Ministry of Defence where price negotiations are done and final decisions are made.

I did not receive any report of kickbacks and bribes. No one came near me to indulge in such a talk. However, it would be difficult for me to state that no such attempts were ever made with others.

Do Army’s procurement procedures need an overhaul?

Yes, indeed! There have been attempts to improve Defence Procurement Procedures (DPP) ever since 2002. The DPP, based on experience, have been updated many times since then. But as the latest scandal shows, these are far from becoming foolproof. As in all other fields, the implementation of laid down procedures seems to be a problem.

Do you think the controversies involving the MoD and the chief dented the image of the Army?

As I have already stated, it has dented the image of the Army, the Government and even the nation.

Is Gen Singh a whistleblower or a rebel? Could he have handled this entire issue any better?

It would be wrong on my part to pass judgment on the chief’s conduct. 

Friday, March 30, 2012

NATIONS SECURITY

The present Topic is about the Army Chief's letter to PM. All politicians are angry and some parties are demanding his removal. What crime he has done. he written a letter to PM about :
*Army tanks not having critical ammunition to defeat enemy tanks.
*Infantry poorly equipped.and lack of night-fighting capabilities, large scale voids in critical surveillance.
*Ellite special forces woefully short of essential weapons.
*Air defense equipments 97% obsolete.undermines confidence to protect from the air.
*Substandard procurement of trucks,tanks equipments etc due to corruption.
In other words he exposed the CORRUPTION in the Indian Army.
For this letter and his attitude, the who political leaders of all parties are against him and wants action against him. This is INDIAN DEMOCRACY.
PEOPLE DONG KNOW ABOUT ORDNANCE FACTORIES.
STILL NO ONE KNOWS ACTION TAKEN AGAINST THE EX-CHAIRMAN AS ON DATE.
CORRUPTION MEANS NOT ONLY ACCEPTING BRIBES AND PURCHASING DEFECTIVE MATERIAL/PRODUCTS, BUT ALSO NOT FOLLOWING THE GOVERNMENT RULES FOR SOME BODY BENEFITS ALSO.

AGENTS of ASSOCIATIONS

Now OFB issued a circular vide No.14/31/2012/A/IR dated 23-03-2012 asking all GMs to obtain Option for membership of JWMs ( erstwhile members of AIANGO & NDNGSA) in favor of IOFGO has to be accepted and their names to be included in the list for deduction of membership through check off system for the year 2012-13 and onwards subject to the fulfillment of conditions laid down in the approval bye laws of IOFGOA without imposing any new conditions.
THIS IS HOW DIR/IR OF OFB WORKING ON THE PAY ROLE OF IOFGO AND FORCING THE EXISTING JWMS TO JOIN THAT IOFGO, VIOLATING THE FUNDAMENTAL RIGHTS OF JWMS.
LET US SEE HOW THE EXISTING JWMS OF OFB ACTS ? ARE THEY GOING TO ACCEPT THE DIRECTIONS OF DIR/IR DIRECTIONS OR JOINS IN THE NEW ASSOCIATION OF NDGBGOA TO ACHIEVE THEIR OWN GOALS FOR FIGHTING WITH THE DICTATORIAL OFB