
NASHIK, Dec 29: Two persons, including a teenager named Kiran Madhukar Ahire, were arrested on Saturday, in connection with the theft of 44 kilos of spare parts of the MiG series of combat aircraft from the Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd (HAL) complex at Ozar.
Kiran stole the spares from the assembly shop of HAL and sold them to a scrap dealer Altaf Yusuf Shah at Wadala in Nashik. A HAL security officer B B Pagare lodged a complaint with the police on December 26. Both the accused were arrested. The incident shows that even the high-security HAL complex is vulnerable to petty thievery. Earlier, on August 16, 1994, four thieves sneaked into the complex and stole imported spare parts of a MiG aircraft. Valued at Rs 3.50 lakh, they were sold to a scrap dealer for Rs 300. The four were arrested and the booty recovered.
However, HAL dismissed the incident as a petty theft, claiming that the accused were not a part of a major gang or espionage racket. Yo¬Ut›¤A¼Tt›ay to discuss financial support for Seoul.
The Wall Street Journal said major US lenders had agreed to roll over some existing loans to Korean banks and that Monday’s talks were also expected to address the possibility of US banks underwriting a series of big new loans to Seoul.
The won ended at 1,395 to the dollar, up 7 per cent from its previous 1,498 close and dealers saw it climbing further. The won’s strength bolstered the Hong Kong dollar in morning trade but it trickled down to 7.7493/03 to the dollar by 0905 GMT, unchanged from its Wednesday close. Hong Kong financial markets were closed for an extended Christmas break. The Taiwan dollar ended mildly higher at T$32.686 per dollar from a previous T$32.708 close.
Taipei traders said the central bank might have intervened to prop up the sagging currency in the final minutes of trade, but the market was otherwise featureless. In southeast Asia, the Philippine peso displayed little Christmas cheer after a four-day break, closing only slightly higher at 39.90 against a previous 39.970 after the central bank’s dollar sales.
The central bank declined to resume a pooled dollar fund programme, originally established to help meet corporate dollar requirements, but disbanded after it proved inadequate.
Manila traders said the central bank bought $6.5 million at 39.70/90 pesos in early trade. It later sold dollars when the peso fell to 40.60 due to fresh corporate requirements.
Interbank call loan rates shot to early highs of 45 per cent on fears of a liquidity squeeze after the long weekend.
The Indonesian rupiah spiked above 5,000 to the dollar inlate trade against an opening 5,000/5,200 after Bank Indonesi intervened to sell dollars at 5,300 rupiah, dealers said. Short-end swaps remained below par as dollar demandcontinued to outweigh supply.
Dealers said volumes were thin on the second-last tradingday of the year. The market will be closed on Wednesday for book-closing and on Thursday for the New Year holiday.
The Thai baht was at 46.70/95 to the dollar onshore at 0915GMT from 47.10/45 late on Friday as commercial dollar demand dwindled and exporters sold dollars.
The market appeared to ignore Prime Minister Chuan Leekpai’s weekend comments that Thailand might seek an easing of conditions under its IMF-led bailout programme.
Chuan was quoted by the Bangkok Post as saying Thailand mayask for an easing of some conditions, particularly the requirement of a budget surplus in fiscal 1997-98.
A government Minister said on Monday Thailand would notrequest any changes to the conditions, but it was up to the IMF to suggest changes following a review of the economy.
Kuala Lumpur dealers said the ringgit was undr slightpressure from importer dollar demand, but it was not expected to do much for the rest of the week. The Singapore dollar drifted below the 1.67 mark to the US Dollar in subdued trade, showing little reaction to a prime rate hike by two of Singapore’s "Big Four" local banks.
OCBC Bank and United Overseas Bank each raised their prime rates to seven per cent from 6.5 per cent, marking their second rate rise in a month.The move, while somewhat earlier than expected, did not come as a surprise to the market and analysts said other banks were likely to follow suit.


