The Armed Forces of the
The rifles valued at P1.9 billion were supplied by the United States-based Remington Outdoor Company but the company still has to replace the defective weapons, according to Col. Noel Detoyato, AFP public affairs chief.
In this file photo, President Benigno S. Aquino III hands over one of the M4 assault rifles to an Army soldier during the ceremonial distribution held at the AFP General Headquarters on August 14, 2014. Malacañang Photo Bureau
In August last year, the military handed 27,000 pieces of M-4 rifles to the Philippine Army and Marines in ceremonies attended by President Benigno S. Aquino III at
After a
technical inspection, the military’s acceptance committee rejected the rifles
due to defective sights and barrel grooves, Detoyato said. He did not say
when Remington would replace the rifles.
“The
supplier (Remington) has to correct this before the technical
inspection and acceptance committee (TIAC) will give the go signal for us
to accept,” Detoyato said.
Of the
50,529 M4 rifles, at least 44,186 rifles were set aside for
the Army and another 6,443 for the Marines.
Remington sold
theM-4 rifles to the AFP for P38,402 apiece under the
Joint Army-Marine Corps. Assault Rifles Acquisition Project.
The military
said it saved P1.2 billion from the deal and vowed to use the
savings to buy additional weapons as part of the AFP modernization.
The first batch
of 100 rifles was delivered on July 5, 2014 and the
second batch of 27,200. The remaining 23,329 units were supposed to be
delivered in December 2014.
Soldiers of the
7th infantry division based on Fort Magsaysay ,
Nueva Ecija received an undetermined number of the M-4 rifles which were
covered by the recall order, sources said.
http://manilastandardtoday.com/2015/08/26/50-629-assault-rifles-defective-military/
In item I posted earlier, the Philippine News Agency says rear sights have been fixed on most weapons. See "All M-4 rear rights now OK -- AFP" at the following URL: http://www.pna.gov.ph/index.php?idn=1&sid=&nid=1&rid=797031
ReplyDelete