Nagpur (Maharashtra) : Former Union minister and senior journalist Arun Shourie said Friday that the report published by 'The Hindu' newspaper confirms the allegation that the Prime Minister's Office was interfering in the Rafale negotiations.

The Narendra Modi government was rocked Friday by a 2015 Defence Ministry note cited in a report in The Hindu expressing objections to "parallel" negotiations by the PMO.

Speaking to the media here at a journalism awards function, Shourie said, "It confirms everything said by people like us that the Defence Ministry and others had no say in the (Rafale purchase) matter.

"Air Force had no say in the matter. The original proposal which was worked out after five years of work was that 126 planes will be taken, of which only 18 will be procured in fly-away condition and the rest will be made by HAL, and to make them, technology will be fully transferred by Dassault," Shourie said.

Now, as The Hindu report informed, the defence secretary himself wrote that the PMO was interfering in the whole matter, the former BJP leader said.

Shourie also claimed that then defence minister Manohar Parrikar was completely unaware of the new deal which Prime Minister Narendra Modi struck with the French government as "he (Parrikar) was opening a fish festival in Goa" then.

Even in his statement, Parrikar was cautious as he only said that it was the prime minister's decision which he supported, claimed the veteran journalist-turned-politician.

"The whole procedure" was discarded while carrying out new negotiations for the fighter aircraft, Shourie alleged.

"We have filed a review petition in great detail, if the Supreme Court accepts, we will argue on it and we hope they will give us opportunity to present our case fully," said Shourie, who along with lawyer Prashant Bhushan had moved the apex court earlier seeking a probe into the Rafale deal. The SC had then rejected the demand.

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Manila: Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr has declared a national energy emergency, citing the “imminent danger” to the country’s fuel supply due to global disruptions linked to the ongoing conflict involving the US, Israel, and Iran, Al Jazeera reported.

“The declaration of a state of national energy emergency will enable the government… to implement ‌responsive and coordinated measures under existing laws to address the risks posed by disruptions in the global energy supply and the domestic economy,” Al Jazeera quoted Marcos Jr as saying.

As part of the emergency response, a committee has been formed to ensure the orderly movement, supply, distribution and availability of fuel, food, medicine, agricultural products and ⁠other essential goods, he said.

The emergency declaration, which will remain in force for one year, allows the government to procure fuel in advance and take action against hoarding and profiteering.

Authorities are also empowered to take action against the hoarding, profiteering and manipulation of petroleum product supplies.

Energy Secretary Sharon Garin said the country currently has about 45 days of fuel supply based on current consumption. She added that the government is working to procure 1 million barrels of oil from countries within and outside Southeast Asia to build a buffer stock, though uncertainties remain.

Meanwhile, Philippine Ambassador to the US Jose Manuel Romualdez said the government is in talks with Washington to secure exemptions that would allow for the purchase of oil from countries under US sanctions.

The announcement comes amid rising public discontent. Transport workers, commuters, and consumer groups have planned a two-day strike to protest fuel price hikes and what they call inadequate government response.

Piston, a federation of public transport associations, described the declaration of a national energy emergency as a “superficial band-aid that deliberately ignores the structural roots of the fuel crisis”.

“If the government genuinely intends to protect transport workers and commuters from this geopolitical crisis, it would immediately suspend the Excise Tax and Value-Added Tax on petroleum products to drastically lower prices overnight,” Al Jazeera quoted Piston as saying.

Renato Reyes Jr, of the progressive civil society coalition Bayan, said the declaration “does not address the basic problem of runaway oil prices and [their] effects on the mass transport system and other sectors in the country”.

As part of the government’s mitigation measures, students and workers in some cities are being given free access to bus rides, and the government has started to provide a 5,000 peso subsidy for public transport workers, including motorcycle taxi drivers, to help them cope with rising fuel costs.