Sanjha Morcha

In a first, Geelani mourns death of soldiers in Uri

SRINAGAR: The chairman of the hardline faction of the Hurriyat Conference, Syed Ali Shah Geelani, on Monday expressed grief over the loss of lives in the Uri militant attack.

Commenting on the death of 18 soldiers in the attack on an army base camp in Uri, Geelani said, “We as human beings feel pain and with sincere heart believe to promote universal brotherhood. We never derive pleasure from human sufferings, and the forces personnel that lost their lives were humans.” This is perhaps the first time that Geelani, a doggedly proPakistan hawk among the separatists, has mourned the killing of security personnel in Kashmir.

At the same time, he slammed politicians for creating a warlike situation. Geelani also flayed the media for “adding fuel to an already volatile situation”. Taking a dig at “local stooges”, he said in a bid to gain favours from their masters, they blamed Pakistan without assigning any logic.


Indians will struggle to explain security lapse in Uri

URI ATTACK DOES NOT SEEM TO BE HEADED FOR THE SAME DESTINY AS PATHANKOT. THE DURATION OF THE ATTACK WAS MUCH SHORTER, THE DAMAGE DONE, MUCH WORSE

After the Pathankot attack in January this year, warmongers in both Pakistan and India were dealt a humiliating defeat. Prime Minister Narendra Modi, despite being a right-wing political phenom, eschewed impulsiveness and chose to wait for Pakistan’s response.

Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, despite having a record of offering only symbolic resistance to antiIndia voices in Pakistan, set up an unprecedented series of moves by the Pakistani government to work to answer post-attack questions.

India and Pakistan cooperated to an unprecedented degree in the Pathankot investigation. This is why, unlike the 2007 Samjhauta Express bombing and the Mumbai attacks of 2008, Pathankot was not a defining event in the relationship.

The Uri attack does not seem to be headed for the same destiny as Pathankot. For starters, the duration of the attack was much shorter, the damage done, much worse.

It is also an attack in which Indian authorities will struggle to explain how an army installation in Kashmir, close to the Line of Control, could lose soldiers who were asleep in their tents. What kind of security protocols does the Indian Army follow in Kashmir, already in the grip of the most tension in recent memory, that such an attack could even be conceived?

Of course, the most significant difference between Pathankot and Uri is the context of PakistanIndia relations. Pathankot was designed to disrupt the momentum that Messrs Sharif and Modi had built up since their embrace at the Paris climate change summit toward the end of 2015. A meeting of their national security advisors in Bangkok was quickly followed by a Christmas Day visit to Lahore by Modi that had even the worst cynics dreaming of a real chance at regional normalisation. Pathankot disrupted that momentum, but it did not totally destroy it. Nonstate actors should never be given that power over the security of a billion and a half people.

Uri is indeed different because it comes at a time when hopes of better relations between Pakistan and India have already derailed. Doubling down repression in Kashmir, and the baiting of Pakistan during Modi’s August 15 speech means no détente was intended or scheduled.

As the UN General Assembly gets underway this coming week, the world was preparing to be treated to the ungainly spectacle of the two countries trading barbs with each other both inside the General Assembly hall, and outside it.

The Uri attack does not change that – it makes it much worse. Warmongers in both countries want war. They were denied their bloodlust after Pathankot. It may take some very special leadership to deny them again. Can we be sure that Messrs Modi and Sharif will provide it?


Why Uri military base is vulnerable to militant attacks

URI HAS BEEN TARGETED BY MILITANTS BEFORE. A RAID IN DECEMBER 2014, ALSO NEAR URI, HAD KILLED 8 SOLDIERS, THREE POLICEMEN

SRINAGAR: The Uri military base attacked by militants on Sunday morning is one of the most important garrisons in Kashmir and guards the Line of Control (LoC), which is India’s de-facto border with Pakistan.

AP PHOTOSoldiers arrive at the military base in Uri town of Baramulla district near the Line of Control in north Kashmir on Sunday.

The base is strategically important for two reasons: It serves to thwart aggression from Pakistan and guard against infiltration attempts by militants since armed insurgency erupted in Kashmir in 1989.

The base — the brigade headquarters that houses 12,000-13,000 soldiers — is close to the border and it is from here that men and material are sent to the LoC.

However, the base is also vulnerable as it can be approached from the LoC on three sides, one of them as close as six kilometres.

Though there are armed sentries round-the-clock, a large number of the soldiers at the base are in transit, making them relatively relaxed than when on duty.

What caused the large number of casualties and injuries in Sunday’s attack was the fact the base had a large number of troops turning over after their tour of duty, sources said. They were stationed in tents and temporary shelters which caught fire. Several of the dead and injured received burn injuries.

The base is also located in the plains and is under constant observation from Pakistani army posts higher in the mountains.

A project of the National Hydro Power Corporation also been constructed in the area, mostly underground to prevent damage in case a war breaks out.

Uri – a garrison town with little anti-India sentiment – has been targeted by militants before. A raid in December 2014, also near Uri, had killed eight soldiers and three policemen.

An army official said that the attack was not on the 12 Brigade headquarters but on a rear administrative base close to the brigade.

Rear administrative base is a place where the army units deployed on the LoC “leave their non-operational and other administrative stores behind”.

The official said the Army deploys some personnel on guard to look after the stores. In effect, it means that minimum troops are kept in the rear. Former GOC 15 Corps in Kashmir, Lt Gen (Retd) Syed Ata Hasnain tweeted “such places very vulnerable (sic).”


Army reach out to the deprived on Eid

Army reach out to the deprived on Eid
Chinar Corps Commander Lt Gen Satish Dua during the Eid celebrations at the Jammu and Kashmir Light Infantry Regimental Centre in Rangreth on Tuesday. Tribune photo

Tribune Reporters

Srinagar, September 13

The Army today celebrated Eid-ul-Azha with people across the Valley. With the message of peace, the festival was celebrated with traditional solemnity and spirit of brotherhood in all parts of Kashmir, a defence spokesman said.“In a unique humanitarian gesture, the Chinar Corps formations and units observed the ‘festival of sacrifice’ by reaching out to the underprivileged sections of society and offering them ‘sacrificial goats’, sweets and other gifts,” the spokesman said.The Army soldiers joined the people in different parts of Kashmir in offering prayers and sharing “Eidis.”“A conscious effort was made to be with the underprivileged and bereaved children in orphanages in numerous places, including Qasbanagam, Bijbehara, Salar, Tral, Galandhar, Nambal, Wessu and Kakapora in south Kashmir and Nihalpura, Baramulla, Bemiyar, Pattan, Mantrigam,Wagura, Mazbugh and Seelu in north Kashmir,” he said.The Army in remote areas along the Line of Control in Gulmarg, Uri, Tangdhar, Keran, Machhal and Gurez sectors also joined the people in celebrating the festival.The JAKLl Regimental Centre, Rangreth, also witnessed a confluence of soldiers and locals from a wide cross-section of society. Similar initiatives were also undertaken in Zangli, Kupwara, Shalateng, Awantipura, Bandipura, Anantnag and several other areas.Chinar Corps Commander Lt Gen Satish Dua joined the troops and people in offering prayers at the JAKLl Regimental Centre.Celebrates festival with Poonch residentsJammu: The Eid-ul-Azha festival was celebrated with fervour and zeal by the Army units based at Daraba today in Poonch.The festival was celebrated with great enthusiasm with troops of all communities and a large number of locals from Balakote, Dhargloon, Sandote, Goldh, Lanjot and nearby villages taking part.People from all segments of society attended and greeted each other on the pious occasion.


MiG-21 crashes near Barmer, pilots safe

MiG-21 crashes near Barmer, pilots safe
After the crash. ANI

Our Correspondent

Jaipur, September 10

In the second such incident in less than three months, a MiG-21 trainer jet of the Air Force crashed near Barmer in Rajasthan today. Both the pilots were able to eject safely.The plane had taken off on a routine sortie from Uttarlai airbase and crashed in an open field near Malio Ki Dhani, about 20 km from Barmer. The plane caught fire as it fell in an agriculture field around 12.15 pm. (Follow The Tribune on Facebook; and Twitter @thetribunechd)No loss of property was reported from the ground, said a defence spokesperson, adding that a court of inquiry had been ordered. On June 13, a MiG-27 had crashed in a residential area of Jodhpur. Three persons had received minor injuries as it dashed against the wall of a house where a number of people were present. 

 

 


India needs 4 times defence budget to meet 2020 coal target

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The government has estimated that by the year 2020, India will need 1.5 billion tonnes of coal. But an India Spend analysis of a recent report by Brookings India indicates that even by a generous estimate, the country’s need for coal will not exceed 1.2 billion tonnes over the next four years.

There is another reason to scale down this target as, to achieve it, the government would have to invest around Rs 10 lakh crore ($ 149 billion), according to a June 2016 Price Waterhouse Coopers (PwC) report. That is four times India’s annual defence budget.

Laying down the government target early last year, Union Coal Secretary Anil Swarup had apportioned coal-production thus: “What we have worked on is that a billion tonnes will come from Coal India Limited (CIL) and 500 to 600 million tonnes (MT) from the private sector.”

A state-owned company that accounts for 80 per cent of India’s coal production, CIL has indeed increased its output by 74 MT over the past two years, as Factchecker reported in August 2016. But it is unlikely that it will get the government the yield it hopes for, we find.

To estimate India’s coal needs after six years, the Brookings report focuses on three sets of data:

1. Base growth rate: In this case, the report analysed two different scenarios:

Scenario 1: Non-power-sector demand was extrapolated based on gross domestic product (GDP) and assumptions were made that demand and production would be elastic –responsiveness of production to rise in demand and prices. Power demand was calculated on upcoming thermal power capacity (examining all plants under construction, their locations, technology, and status, assuming a similar plant load factor (PLF) — or the capacity utilisation of a power plant — as in financial year 2014-15.

Assumptions for the non-power sector include the following: 8 per cent GDP growth, respective sectoral GDP changes due to supply and demand and continued imports proportionate to imports in the base year 2014-15. This scenario puts the estimate at 1,311 MT.

Scenario 2: The non-power-sector demand was kept the same as scenario 1. A power-demand calculation was made assuming i) no power cuts by 2020 b) electrification to unconnected rural consumers and reduction in distribution losses. This scenario pegs the estimate at 1,228 MT, a more realistic figure, as per the report.

2. High Coal: This method, which pegs India’s coal requirement at 1,291 MT, is optimistic and assumes no imports of thermal coal (imports of coking coal — used to primarily manufacture steel — however, are assumed to continue), a high GDP growth of 8 per cent, 100 per cent electrification with no power cuts, and a modest growth of renewable energy. The assumption is that renewable energy does not displace coal very much as a source of power generation.

Although the health costs to India of using coal to generate electricity are about $4.6 billion (Rs 29,400 crore) annually, which is the cost of setting up five power plants of 1,000 MW each, or 2 per cent of India’s installed capacity, every year, India may have little option but to focus on coal as the primary source of electricity, with the need for coal-fired electricity estimated to increase three times by 2030, as IndiaSpend reported in May 2015.

Coal generates over 75 per cent of India’s electricity and is among the cheapest energy sources available. But its main advantage over other feasible alternatives is that it is largely immune to interference from nature — quakes, floods, droughts — economic vagaries and artificial accidents.

3. Low Coal: This scenario assumes a partial improvement in supply quality with imports in the same proportion as in 2014-15, and pegs the requirement at 1,139 MT.

Today, about 45 MT ((7.4 per cent) of India’s coal production comes from private miners. Achieving the government target of 500 MT by 2020 would require an unprecedented 11 times growth or a compounded annual growth rate (CAGR) of 61 per cent in the private sector.

If CIL and the other mining PSUs are to reach the 1-billion-tonne target, they will need to grow at an aggregated 12 per cent CAGR. If the growth target is limited to just CIL, then the company’s CAGR will stand at 15 per cent. The report notes that although CIL did achieve 8.5 per cent year-on-year growth in 2015-16 — its best ever — it still missed its target by 12 MT, settling for 538 MT in the last fiscal.

Thus, the 12 per cent growth for CIL seems unlikely, especially in the future over a larger base. A 12 per cent growth on a 500 base (production around 500 MT mark) — CIL produced 538 MT in 2015-16 — is easier than on an 800 base (production around 800 MT), which means CIL must produce more than 800 million tonnes in the future.

The PwC report observed that India would need to reform land acquisition, ensure enough water, augment logistics infrastructures, develop coal washeries, and train workers to create an environment that would ensure the 1.5-billion-tonne target.

“The development of the sector will be critical to India’s economic growth. Major policy changes over the past couple of years have given the necessary impetus to the sector,” wrote Kameswara Rao, Energy, Utilities and Mining Leader, PwC India, in the report. “The government will have to lead the growth of the sector by creating favourable conditions in terms of infrastructure, funding, technology upgradation and skill development.”

–IANS


Surgical strikes across LoC hit 6 terror pads

Army raid from midnight to dawn at 5 places on other side of J&K | Says terrorists neutralised in swift operation; Pak denies claim

  •  Lt Gen Ranbir Singh,

Director General Military Operations

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The resolute action by India came 11 days after 18 soldiers were killed in the Uri sector. AFP

Tribune News Service

New Delhi, September 29

Mounting a swift counter-terror operation across the Line of Control in Jammu and Kashmir, the Indian Army today announced it had neutralised terrorists waiting to infiltrate. The brave military manoeuvre was hailed across the country.The ‘surgical strikes’ was a resolute action by India 11 days after 18 soldiers were killed in the Uri sector in an attack by Jaish terrorists from across the border. The action came days after Prime Minister Narendra Modi promised that the blood of the jawans will not go in vain and the Army, asserting it will act at a place and time of its choosing, did so from midnight to dawn at five places and six launch pads.“Based on specific and credible inputs that some terrorist teams had positioned themselves at launch pads along the LoC to carry out infiltration and conduct terrorist strikes inside J&K and in various metros, the Indian Army conducted surgical strikes at several of these launch pads. The operations were focussed on ensuring that these terrorists do not succeed in their design to endanger the lives of our citizens,” the Director General of Military Operations, Lt. Gen Ranbir Singh, said at a joint briefing with the Ministry of External Affairs. He said he had shared the information with his Pakistani counterpart.Pakistan rejected across-LoC strikes as a “fabrication of truth”, suggesting it was a move to cater to the domestic media and public. “There has been no surgical strike by India; instead, there had been cross-border fire initiated and conducted by India which is an existential phenomenon,” the Pakistan army said. It admitted the loss of two soldiers and injuries to nine.Stating that significant casualties were caused to terrorists and those providing support, the DGMO said while India does not have any further plans to continue, it was fully prepared for any contingency that may arise.An immediate fallout was that border residents of Punjab were asked to move to safer locations and India stepped up its international outreach with Foreign Secretary S. Jaishankar briefing envoys from 25 countries. Earlier, National Security Adviser Ajit Doval spoke to his counterpart in the US.Prior to the announcement on the successful conduct of the operation, Prime Minister Modi chaired a meeting of the Cabinet Committee on Security that was briefed about it. He later briefed President Pranab Mukherjee and spoke to Vice-President Hamid Ansari and former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh. On his part, Home Minister Rajnath Singh briefed several chief ministers and leaders of various political parties, all of whom came out in support of the action against terrorists.

What he said…

  • Significant casualties have been caused to the terrorists andthose who are trying to support them. India’s intention is to maintain peace in the region,
  • but we can certainly not allow terrorists to operate across LoC with impunity and attack our citizens.
  • In line with Pakistan’s commitment made in January 2004 not to allow its soil or territory under its control for any terrorist activities against India, we expect the Pakistani army to cooperate to erase this menace of terrorism. — Lt Gen Ranbir Singh,Director General Military Operations

 


Evacuation ordered along border in Punjab

The evacuation has already started in Ferozepur. Tribune photo: Anirudh Gupta

Tribune News Service

Chandigarh, September 29

Following instructions from the Centre, Punjab has ordered the evacuation of people from villages falling within 10 km of the border with Pakistan after India conducted surgical strikes across the LoC on Wednesday night.Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal on Thursday put the entire government and political machinery in an emergency mode following reports of developments on the India-Pakistan border.

(Follow The Tribune on Facebook; and Twitter @thetribunechd)

Union Home Minister Rajnath Singh spoke to Badal on phone in the morning to request him to immediately start the process of evacuation of people residing in villages falling within 10 km of the international border in view of the escalating situation.During an emergency meeting convened at his official residence, Badal directed the Chief Secretary and DGP, who were present, to ask deputy commissioners (DCs) and senior superintendents of police (SSPs) to oversee the entire evacuation process in the border districts of Ferozepur, Fazilka, Amritsar, Tarn Taran, Gurdaspur and Pathankot. The Chief Minister directed the DCs to identify suitable locations for setting up camps and ensure that none of the residents being evacuated were put to any inconvenience.The Chief Minister also spoke to the cabinet ministers and MLAs to camp in these border districts in which their assembly constituencies fell, to keep close liaison with the district administration to ensure the safe movement of the residents of the villages within close proximity of the border.Badal also directed the Chief Secretary to immediately release Rs 1 crore each to all deputy commissioners of six border districts to meet out any exigency arising out of the prevailing situation.The Chief Minister has also called an emergency meeting of the state Cabinet at 6 pm on Thursday to review the situation in the wake of the recent developments on the border and the advisory issued by the Ministry of Home Affairs.The meeting was attended by Chief Secretary Sarvesh Kaushal, Principal Secretary to Chief Minister SK Sandhu, DGP Suresh Arora and Special Principal Secretary to Chief Minister Gaggandip Singh Brar.According to reports, schools in border areas have been closed.

Meanwhile, district administrations have been arranging buses for people to move away from villages along the border. Medical staff has been asked to remain on duty. Civil surgeons have been told to put things in place in emergency wards.

Marriage palace owners have been asked to keep their palaces vacant. In case of need, people moving out of the border belt can be put there. All government employees who were on leave asked to report back in the border district. Revenue officials asked to make arrangements to set up relief camps.


Pak warplanes conduct drill but experts say war unlikely

ISLAMABAD/NEW DELHI: Pakistani warplanes landed on a highway linking Peshawar and Rawalpindi on Thursday as part of an exercise, fuelling speculation that the armed forces were preparing for possible hostilities with India.

APAnti­India protestors gather in Islamabad on Thursday to express solidarity with Kashmiris.

A Pakistan Air Force (PAF) spokesman said F-7 and Mirage jets touched down on the M1 Motorway, a 155-km highway, as part of the “Highmark” exercise, media reports said.

Pakistani social media users posted footage of a jet landing on the highway.

Highmark, one of the PAF’s largest wargames, is expected to end on September 24.

Despite officials insisting that the exercise was planned in advance, the closure of the airspace and flights by combat jets led to rumours that Pakistan’s armed forces were preparing for a possible Indian attack, the Dawn newspaper reported.

Despite the air exercise, most Pakistani analysts and commentators ruled out a military confrontation .

“We are seeing a lot of tough talking but whether that translates into anything more substantial is doubtful,” commented leading analyst Lt Gen (retired ) Talat Masood. He said India-Pakistan ties have now settled into a “comfortable pattern” which usually has its high and low points. The only fear this time was whether India would want to break the pattern due to pressure on the Modi government.