Sri lanka, Egypt interested in Tejas deal

Sri Lanka had recently rejected Pakistan's JF-17 aircraft built with Chinese help.

Update: 2016-04-18 21:28 GMT
The two countries are interested in the current version of the Tejas

New Delhi: India’s Light Combat Aircraft Tejas, which was several years in the making, has now caught the attention of foreign buyers with Sri Lanka and Egypt evincing interest in the indigenously built fighter jet.

Sri Lanka had recently rejected Pakistan’s JF-17 aircraft built with Chinese help, while Egypt had last year signed a contract for 24 French-made Rafale fighter jets.

The two countries are interested in the current version of the Tejas and not the upgraded one which will be rolled out later. However, state-run Hindustan Aeronautics Limited (HAL), the manufacturer of Tejas, is focusing on delivering the aircraft to the IAF first.

“While there is an interest which has been shown (by other countries), let us get the product first to our own customer. The confidence that will come to others when our own Air Force flies it will be immense.

So at first, we should at least meet the initial requirement of the IAF,” HAL chairman T. Suvarna Raju said. He expressed confidence in his marketing team.

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