Sanjha Morcha

Wife moves HC, says BSF jawan missing

Wife moves HC, says BSF jawan missing
Tej Bahadur Yadav

New Delhi, February 9

The wife of a BSF jawan, who had gone public alleging poor quality food being served, today filed a habeas corpus plea in the Delhi High Court claiming that her husband was untraceable for the past three days.BSF jawan Tej Bahadur Yadav had on January 9 posted a video on Facebook showing a meal box comprising a watery soup-like dal, which he said had only turmeric and salt and a burnt chapatti.He had said this was what jawans were served at mealtime on duty at places, including the Line of Control (LoC) with Pakistan, and that jawans often went to bed on an empty stomach.(Follow The Tribune on Facebook; and Twitter @thetribunechd)Pursuant to the video going viral on the social media, the Prime Minister’s Office had sought a detailed report.A PIL was also filed in the Delhi High Court seeking a direction to the government to depute higher officers to supervise cooking and its distribution.It sought a status report on the quality of food served to soldiers along the LoC. It had also directed BSF to produce the investigation report and the steps taken with regard to the allegations levelled.Now less than a month after the PIL was filed, Yadav’s wife has sought a probe into his disappearance as well as the recent rejection of his plea for voluntary retirement. — PTI 


Election Commission orders repolling in 48 Punjab polling stations on Feb 9

Election Commission orders repolling in 48 Punjab polling stations on Feb 9
VVPATs had developed a snag at some places

KV Prasad

Tribune News Service

New Delhi, February 7

The Election Commission on Tuesday announced repolling in 48 polling stations falling in Majitha, Muktsar and Sangrur assembly segments in Punjab. It will be held on February 9, Thursday.At many polling stations, the VVPATs and EVMs had reportedly developed a snag.The repolling will be held at 16 polling stations for the Amritsar Lok Sabha seat.

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Also read: Why repolling when we don’t want it: Bikram Singh MajithiaAs far as Assembly seats are concerned, it will be held at 12 polling stations in Majitha, one in Moga, nine in Muktsar, four in Sardulgarh and six polling stations in Sangrur.The repolling will be held from 8 am to 5 pm.The EC order said the repolling would uphold the integrity of the electoral process.

The Election Commission said that at some places polling was interrupted as VVPAT machines and EVMs had malfunctioned. Of 24,697 Ballot Units and 24,256 Control Units used in Punjab 180 BUs and 184 CUs failed during the poll, the EC added.

The Election Commission had even sought a report from the state election authorities about the malfunctioning of VVPATs which caused delayed in voting.After VVPATs developed snag, AAP national convener and Delhi Chief Minister had attacked the Election Commission and tweeted, “Never has any election seen malfunctioning EVMs on such a large scale. Was it mischief done deliberately by or in collusion with EC?”AAP leader Sanjay Singh had even raised the matter with Punjab CEO, demanding extension in time where polling was affected because of VVPAT problem.Voter verifiable paper audit trail (VVPAT) generates a receipt and allow people to verify if the vote went in favour of the candidate against whose name the button was pressed on the EVM. — With agency inputs

Why repolling when we don’t want it: Bikram Singh Majithia

Why repolling when we don’t want it: Bikram Singh Majithia
Bikram Singh Majithia.

Jupinderjit Singh

Tribune News Service

Chandigarh, February 7

The Election Commission on Tuesday drew flak from leaders over the issue of repolling in 48 polling stations falling in Majitha, Muktsar and Sangrur Assembly segments following malfunctioning in the Voter-Verified Audit Paper Trail (VVPAT) and EVMs on February 4.The repolling will take place on February 9.

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Akali candidate Bikram Singh Majithia from Majitha constituency said he was surprised that the EC had ordered repolling as most of the booths listed had recorded upto 90 per cent votes.”I don’t understand the logic behind the repolling. On poll day, we sought extension of time for voting due to a snag in the VVPAT machines. It was denied. Now after three days, the repolling has been ordered. It is a one-way communication. The EC needs to explain. None of the candidates in Majitha had sought repolling,” he  said.                 Majithia said they had said no for repolling after the EC had sought a report from the state election authorities on the malfunctioning of VVPATs, which caused delay in voting.SAD rebel Sukhdarshan Singh Mrar, who contested as an Independent from Muktsar, said: “There is no need for repolling. When no candidate has raised any objection then why the EC has ordered repolling.”

On repoll in Majitha, AAP candiadate Himmat Singh Shergill said he would start doing door to door campaign in the areas that will go to polls again.

He said: I don’t want to comment on EC orders. It is done now. I don’t want to waste even one minute of my door to door campaigning. I was winning the seat. The repoll will increase the victory margin.”Meanwhile, the Sangrur DC has called a meeting of officers to prepare for repolling.AAP national convener and Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal had on Saturday attacked the Election Commission and tweeted, “Never has any election seen malfunctioning EVMs on such a largescale. Was it mischief done deliberately by or in collusion with EC.”AAP leader Sanjay Singh had raised the matter with the Punjab CEO, demanding extension in time where polling was affected because of the VVPAT problem.

Challenge of a third player in Punjab politics

Pritam Singh
In Punjab, the AAP has risen as a third alternative on the ruins of Punjab’s parliamentary Left, the brutal suppression of the Naxalite movement in the early 1970s and the Sikh militant movement in the 1990s. The AAP has given a political platform to those who were alienated from both the Congress and the SAD.

PUNJAB’S election scene was both annoying and fascinating. It was annoying because confronted with the enormity of the task Punjab faces due to its stunted development, we saw cheap tricks, theatrics and personal insults in the course of electioneering. One must appreciate at least two political leaders, Parkash Singh Badal and Dharamvir Gandhi, who  thankfully stuck to civilised language and decorum during campaigning for the polls. Despite this annoyance, the election scene was still fascinating because for the first time, the duopoly of political rule in Punjab has been challenged by a third player, that is the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP).  This will, hopefully, strengthen democracy by enabling Punjabis to widen their political choices and not be forced to choose only between two rivals — the Shiromani Akali Dal and the Congress party.Historically, once there did emerge the possibility of a Left alternative, in the 1950s and in a modified form until 1980. In the 1957 assembly elections in the erstwhile Punjab, 13.6 per cent voters had voted for the Communist Party and 1.3 per cent for the Praja Socialist Party, thus taking the combined Left vote to 15 per cent. If we confine ourselves only to the constituencies which fall in the present-day Punjab, this vote was around 25 per cent. Every fourth voter had then voted for the Left.  Outside parliamentary politics, the Naxalite movement in Punjab in the late 1960s and the early 1970s attracted the brightest and idealistic Punjabi youth to its fold. The parliamentary Left too maintained a good position so much so that for the Assembly elections in 1980, the Akali Dal-CPI-CPM combine narrowly missed capturing power in Punjab. It is tempting to imagine that had that coalition won, the politics of Punjab might have followed a different historical course with  consequences for Indian politics. Until then, the Punjabi Leftists were reasonably successful in combining their roots in Punjab’s egalitarian Sikh traditions with modern socialism.  The parliamentary Left damaged itself after 1984 when instead of following its reputable political philosophy of standing with the oppressed; it became an ally of the establishment while there were massive human rights violations taking place in the rural areas of Punjab. Every movement has its soul and when that soul is lost, the death of the movement is inevitable. The degeneration of the parliamentary Left leadership led to its two elected CPI MLAs in 2002 being lured into the Congress by the then Chief Minister Amarinder Singh. The final demise of this Left alternative was symbolised by its complete absence in the Punjab legislature since 2007.The AAP has risen as a third alternative in Punjab on the ruins of Punjab’s parliamentary Left and the brutal suppression of the Naxalite movement in the early 1970s and of the Sikh militant movement in the 1990s. It is this specific Punjab link that is central to resolving the puzzle that a party with no Punjabi in its central leadership managed to win 4 out of 13 Lok Sabha seats from Punjab in 2014. It not only lost every seat it contested elsewhere in the country but 414 out of the 434 candidates fielded forfeited their security deposits. This stunning performance in Punjab also contributed significantly to its spectacular success in the Delhi Assembly elections in February, 2015. Then Left sympathisers and Sikh activists had actively campaigned for the AAP in Delhi.The suppression of the Naxalite movement in Punjab involved physical liquidation of nearly 100 activists in “encounters” and imprisonment, torture, abuse, harassment and monetary exploitation of thousands of sympathisers. The suppression of this movement left thousands of families broken, discontented, helpless and angry. This network of families and activists had virtually no political home in the existing political parties. The rise of the AAP since 2013/2014 has provided them a platform of hope. Unleashing of the dormant energies of these activists had played a crucial part in the AAP’s electoral victories in 2014, particularly in the Faridkot and Sangrur constituencies and to a lesser extent in the Patiala constituency where Dr Gandhi defeated the Congress candidate Perneet Kaur. These constituencies formed areas where the Naxalite movement had had a substantial following, especially among the youth.The suppression of the Sikh militant movement in the 1980s and 1990s was even wider and deeper than the Naxalite movement. It affected hundreds of thousands of families whose members were liquidated by the security forces or tortured, humiliated or subjected to extortion. A substantial section of the Sikh population was disgruntled and rebellious but without an obvious political home. At one stage, these angry masses supported the Simranjeet Singh Mann-led Akali Dal candidates, leading to massive victories of those candidates to the Lok Sabha in 1989. However, Mann’s inability to organise this support in a sustainable manner led to this discontented mass migrating almost  en bloc in its support to the AAP. The election in 2014 of Harinder Singh Khalsa from Fatehgarh Sahib showed the strength of this stream of the AAP’s support base.The other components in the AAP’s support base include idealistic youth opposed to corruption from the urban Hindu middle class, a section of the Dalits and the diaspora. The AAP’s potential as a third alternative has been weakened by its organisational blunders such as expelling its founding Punjab convener Chhottepur and political blunders such as superimposing the image of the jharoo over that of Golden Temple in its publicity material.  Despite these blunders, the AAP remains a substantial player in Punjab’s electoral politics. It does not have the organisational network that the Akali Dal has but it has fully exploited the Akali Dal’s vulnerability on the government’s mishandling of the desecrations of Shri Guru Granth Sahib. As far as the Congress is concerned, it has nothing to show except Amarinder Singh as a popular leader.One significant political outcome from the AAP’s foray into Punjab is that the issue of Punjab politics being governed by Punjab politicians and not Delhi-based centralised leaders has acquired a level of importance never seen before. All political parties are being forced to underplay the role of their central leaders and to project greater decision-making powers to their state-based leadership. Irrespective of the outcome of this Assembly election, the lasting and valuable contribution of the highly centralised AAP to Punjab would be, paradoxically, to strengthen the regionalisation of Punjab politics.The writer is a Professor of Economics at Oxford Brookes University, UK


Gorkha soldiers celebrate bicentenary

Kathmandu, February 4

Bicentenary celebrations to mark 200 years of services of the Gorkha soldiers of 9th Gorkha Rifles was organised in western Nepal’s Pokhara city today.The event held at Pension Paying Office in Pokhara witnessed a special performance by the Brass and the Pipe Bands of the 39 Gorkha Training Centre, Varanasi. War widows and veterans were felicitated on the occasion with financial assistance in the form of gifts such as sewing machines, wheel chairs and cash incentives, according to a press release issued by the Indian Embassy.Bhu-Puu Samitis were also provided with computers, reiterating the fact that the welfare and well-being of all ex-servicemen was of paramount importance to the Government of India, the release said.The 9th Gorkha Rifles has five battalions and its history dates back to 1817, when it was first raised with Gorkha volunteers as a “Local Levy”. The regiment has distinguished itself in many battles and campaigns in the First and Second World Wars and all battles fought after Independence.Year 2017 marks the bicentenary of 9th Gorkha Rifles for which similar events are being organised at many places in India, but the commencement of the entire celebrations have been done from Nepal. More than 3,500 ex-servicemen and families of 9th Gorkha Rifles participated in the event with zeal and enthusiasm.The event culminated on a high note with a sumptuous “Barakhana” organised specially for the Bhu-Puus. The event was attended by Gen Rajendra Chhetri, COAS, Nepal Army, and Honorary General of the Indian Army, Indian Ambassador to Nepal Ranjit Rae and other dignitaries. — PTI


How Israel developed the most technologically advanced military across the globe

Unlike its Arab adversaries, Israel did not have natural resources to fund its economy.

There was no oil or minerals. Nothing.

The delegation held a couple of meetings but was mostly met with laughs.

The Israelis were trying to sell oranges, kerosene stove tops and fake teeth, the New York Post reports.

For countries like Argentina, which grew its own oranges and was connected to the electrical grid, the products were pretty useless.

It’s hard to imagine this is what Israeli exports looked like a mere 67 years ago.

Today, Israel is a high-tech superpower and one of the world’s top weapons exporters with approximately $6.5billion (£5.2billion GBP) in annual arms sales.

Since 1985, for example, Israel is the world’s largest exporter of drones, responsible for about 60 percent of the global market, trailed by the US, whose market share is under 25 percent.

Its customers are everywhere — Russia, South Korea, Australia, France, Germany and Brazil.

In 2010, for example, five NATO countries were flying Israeli drones in Afghanistan.

How did this happen? How did Israel, a country not yet even 70 years old, become a superpower with one of the most technologically advanced militaries in the world that is changing the way modern wars are fought?

The answer, I believe, is a combination of a number of national characteristics unique to Israel.

First, despite Israel’s small size, about 4.5 percent of its GDP is spent on research and development, almost twice the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development average.

Of that amount, about 30 percent goes to products of a military nature.

By comparison, only 2 percent of German R&D and 17 percent of the US R&D is for the military.

Another major contribution is the culture of innovation and creativity in Israel.

Israelis are more willing to take risks than other nations.

They get this from their compulsory military service during which they are tasked, at a young age, to carry out missions often with deadly consequences.

While Israeli 19-year-olds embark on operations behind enemy lines, their Western counterparts can be found in the safety of their college dormitories.

Lastly, Israel has been in a perpetual state of conflict since its inception, fighting a war almost every decade.

This reality, of having your back up against the wall, sharpens the mind.

It forces Israelis to be creative and come up with innovative ways and weapons to survive.

This is the Israel story …

Robotic border patrols ::

The Guardium is a part of a new category of robotic weapons known as Unmanned Ground Vehicles or UGVs. Israel is the first country in the world using these robots to replace soldiers on missions like border patrols.

Already, Guardium UGVs are deployed along Israel’s border with Syria in the north and the Gaza Strip in the south.

The Guardium is based on a Tomcar dune-buggy-like vehicle and equipped with a range of sensors, cameras and weapons.

It can be driven by a soldier sitting in a command centre miles away or receive a pre-designated route for its patrol, making it completely autonomous.

The increasing use of robots by the Israel Defence Forces is part of a larger strategy to minimise risk to soldiers when possible.

In addition, soldiers require breaks, food and water.

All a Guardium needs is a full tank of gas.

Other UGVs in use by the IDF include the Segev, which is based on a Ford F-350 pickup truck.

Facing terrorists who use tunnels to infiltrate into Israel from places like the Gaza Strip, Israel is also relying on UGVs like robotic snakes to slither their way into underground passageways and enemy headquarters.

The robots will then map out the structures, giving soldiers an accurate picture of a battle area before the place is stormed.

The same is happening at sea.

Israeli defence contractor Rafael has developed an unmanned patrol ship called Protector which is being used by Israel to protect its strategic ports and patrol the country’s long Mediterranean coastline.

The Arrow anti-missile programme ::

In 2000, the Israeli air force received its first operational Arrow missile battery, making Israel the first country in the world with an operational system that could shoot down incoming enemy missiles.

The idea to create the Arrow was born in the mid-1980s after President Ronald Reagan floated his Star Wars plan and asked America’s allies to partner in developing systems that could protect the country from Soviet nuclear missiles.

The Arrow was a revolutionary idea.

Due to Israel’s small size and lack of territory, all ballistic missiles deployed in the region — Syria, Iraq and Iran — can reach anywhere within the country and pose a strategic and possibly even existential threat.

Israel, the developers argued, needed a system that could shoot down enemy missiles over neighbouring countries and provide overall protection for the tiny Jewish state.

The programme had its ups and downs but got a huge boost in funding after the First Gulf War in 1991, when Saddam Hussein fired 39 Scuds into Israel, paralysing the country and forcing millions of Israelis into bomb shelters with their gas masks.

The Arrow was just the beginning. Today, Israel has the Arrow, which is partially funded by the United States, to intercept long-range ballistic missiles, David’s Sling to intercept medium-range rockets and cruise missiles as well as the combat-proven Iron Dome, which has intercepted hundreds of Katyusha rockets fired from the Gaza Strip in recent years.

Israel is the only country in the world that has used missile defence systems in times of war.

These systems do more than just save lives.

They also give the country’s leadership “diplomatic maneuverability,” the opportunity to think and strategise before retaliating against rocket attacks.

While other countries have also invested in missile defence, none has created a multi-tier architecture like Israel.

Mini Spy Satellites ::

In 1988, Israel launched its first spy satellite into space, gaining membership in the exclusive club of just eight nations with independent satellite-launching capabilities.

From the beginning, there were those who doubted Israel was capable of developing, building and launching its own satellite, but in the nearly 30 years since that day, it has grown into a satellite superpower, now operating eight different spy satellites in space.

This is a critical capability considering the threats Israel faces from countries like Iran, which it still suspects is planning one day to build a nuclear weapon.

Israel has shied away from building big satellites and instead designs what are known as “mini satellites,” which weigh about 300 kilograms (661 pounds) in comparison to America’s 25-ton satellites.

Israel’s spy satellites are split into two categories.

Most of Israel’s satellites come with advanced high-resolution cameras like the Ofek-9, launched in 2010, which can discern objects as small as 50 centimetres (20 inches) from hundreds of miles away.

Israel’s other category of satellites are known as the TecSar.

These satellites use a synthetic aperture sensor, basically a radar system that can create high-resolution images at almost the same quality as a regular camera.

The advantage this technology provides Israel is tremendous.

A camera cannot see through clouds or fog, but radars can work in all weather conditions and can even see through camouflage nets.

What this means is that Israel has the ability to track its enemies and gather intelligence on them at all times of the day and through rain, fog or clouds.

Israel’s success in developing state-of-the-art satellites has caught the world’s attention.

In 2005, the French entered a strategic partnership with an Israeli company to develop a satellite, and in 2012, Italy ordered a reconnaissance satellite, paying $182million (£145million GBP).

Singapore and India have also reportedly purchased Israeli satellites over the years.

Drones ::

It is referred to in Israel as the “drone that can reach Iran.”

The Heron TP is Israel’s largest unmanned aerial vehicle with an 85-foot wingspan, the same as a Boeing 737 airliner.

It can stay airborne for 24 hours and carry a 1-ton payload.

While Israel doesn’t openly admit it, the Heron TP is believed to also be capable of launching air-to-surface missiles.

Israel was the first country in the world to operate drones in combat operations.

Its first use of drones was in 1969, when the Israel Defence Forces flew toy planes with cameras glued to their bellies along the Suez Canal to spy on Egypt.

In 1982, it flew its first combat drone, called Scout, in Lebanon, where they played a key role in locating and neutralising Syrian anti-aircraft missile systems.

That operation caught the world’s attention, and in 1986, Israel supplied the US Navy with its first drone, known as the Pioneer.

A few years later, one Pioneer made history when it flew over a group of Iraqi soldiers during the First Gulf War.

The soldiers saw the aircraft, took off their white undershirts and waved them in the air.

It was the first time in history that a military unit had surrendered to a robot.

Israel’s drones have revolutionised the modern battlefield.

They cost a fraction of a manned fighter jet — some as little as a few million dollars — and participate today in every single operation conducted by the IDF.

Drones give soldiers the ability to make calculated decisions before invading territory or storming enemy compounds.

Before Israel bombs a building in the Gaza Strip, for example, it always has a drone in the air to ensure that civilians are not inside.

They also reportedly fly almost daily over Lebanon, tracking fighters for Hezbollah, which is believed to have about 130,000 missiles capable of striking Israel.

The top-secret tank ::

To this day, the Merkava tank is one of Israel’s most top-secret projects.

It is said to be one of the most lethal and protected tanks in the world, and its construction started out of pure necessity — the United Kingdom and other countries refused to sell Israel tanks.

So in the 1970s, it started to build its own.

The newest model — known as the Merkava Mk-4 — is the most impressive.

It can reach speeds of 40 mph and comes with a new modular armour kit, meaning that the tank can be fitted with the armour it needs based on the specific mission it is heading into.

An area, for example, known to be full of anti-tank missile squads requires heavy armour, while an operation without the threat of anti-tank missiles means less.

This also allows tank crews to replace damaged pieces of armour on the battlefield without having to bring the full tank back to a repair shop inside Israel.

In 2012, the Merkava underwent its biggest change yet when a new system — called Trophy — was installed on the tank. Trophy is an active-protection system, basically a personal missile defence system for an individual tank.

Trophy uses a miniature radar to detect incoming anti-tank missiles and then fires a cloud of countermeasures — basically metal pellets — to intercept them.

The radar also interfaces with the tank’s battle management system.

This means that once a missile launch is detected, the coordinates of the enemy squad that fired the missile are immediately obtained, allowing the tank to retaliate quickly and accurately.


Kashmiri soldier’s death benumbs Anantnag village

Kashmiri soldier’s death benumbs Anantnag village
Villagers at the funeral of Jana Begum, who was killed in crossfire in Shopian on Thursday. Tribune Photo: Amin War

Majid Jahangir

Tribune News Service

Srinagar, February 23

After the news of killing of Lance Naik Ghulam Mohiuddin Rather in the Shopian ambush reached his village, relatives and neighbours started converging at Punchpora, Anantnag.Outside Lance Naik Rather’s house, a group of women were inconsolable. Some offered water to the wife of the slain soldier, others tried to cuddle his minor son. Small groups of men assembled en route Lance Naik Rather’s home.Lance Naik Rather was among the three soldiers of 44 Rashtriya Rifles who were killed in the militant ambush at Mulu Chitragam village in Shopian district of south Kashmir. An old woman was also killed in crossfire. Five other soldiers, including two officers, were injured in the incident.Lance Naik Rather’s family members came to know about his death around 9 am through social media. Hours later they were formally informed by the Army about his martyrdom.A pall of gloom descended on the family which was readying to marry his sister next month. “His sister was getting married next month and the family was gearing up for it. We wonder what will happen now,” said a family member of the soldier over phone from the village. “He was the only bread-winner in the family,” he said.The residents of the area said Mohiuddin used to visit his home as he was posted in nearby Shopian. “He would send medicines for his ailing parents whenever he could not come home,” said a neighbour.The Army said Lance Naik Rather’s mortal remains would be sent to his village for the last rites on Friday after a wreath-laying ceremony at 15 Corps Headquarters.


Woman’s killing sparks protests in ShopianSeventy-year-old Jana Begum, who was killed in Shopian, was hit by a stray bullet inside her house. She was probably trying to figure out what was going on outside when the bullet hit her, a police officer said. The woman was found dead by her family soon after. She is survived by husband and five children. Jana was known in the locality as a pious woman. Her killing sparked protests and large number of people attended her funeral. — TNS


Murdered Air Force corporal’s family alleges ‘delay’ in action

Murdered Air Force corporal’s family alleges ‘delay’ in action
Vipan Shukla’s wife Kumkum Shukla (right) at the Civil Hospital in Bathinda on Wednesday. Tribune photo: Pawan sharma

Sukhmeet Bhasin

Tribune News Service

Bathinda, February 22

In the murder case of Indian Air Force (IAF) corporal Vipan Shukla, his relatives today lashed out at the police and Air Force authorities for “delay” in acting on their complaint.Father and wife of the deceased, Triveni Shukla and Kumkum Shukla, respectively, claimed that they had lodged the missing complaint on February 9, but despite their repeated requests, no search was conducted at the staff quarters of the Bhisiana air station.They claimed that even the police did not register case earlier. It was registered on February 15 after the DGP instructed Bathinda SSP Swapan Sharma and further he instructed the SHO.They even wrote letters to the Prime Minister’s Office (PMO), Home Minister, Defence Minister, Chief Justice of India, Chief Justice of Punjab & Haryana High Court and Human Rights Commission on February 18.They alleged that when the police reached the Bhisiana air force station, they were not allowed to enter citing that it was their internal matter.They claimed that on February 21, the police along with the air force authorities recovered the body from the staff quarters of the air force station.Kumkum claimed that the accused couple use to visit their house daily without fail, but after February 8 when Vipan went missing they did not come to their place. She said she even told the police to raid the couple’s house, but they did not heed to her complaint.Corporal Vipan’s body was found chopped and packed in 16 packets from the refrigerator and cupboard in the house of sergeant Shailesh Kumar. The accused had killed Vipan on February 8, but chopped the body into pieces on February 19.The police today produced the accused couple —Shaliesh Kumar and Anuradha — in the court and took two days of police remand for further interrogation.The body also has been sent to Faridkot for postmortem.Bathinda police station SHO Ved Parkash said they were not allowed to enter the air force station, but they carried on the search operation outside the air force station. When they got permission to enter inside yesterday, they recovered the body.

Make killers feel same pain: Kin of IAF corporal murdered over illicit affair

Accused couple sent to two­day police remand, third accused on the run

BATHINDA: “I had sent my son to serve the nation, but never thought he would be murdered brutally like this,” said Triveni Shukla, 54, the inconsolable father of Indian Air Force corporal Vipin Shukla, 27. He was in Bathinda a day after Vipin, a ground staffer with the IAF at the Bhisiana station here, was found to have been murdered allegedly by his paramour, her husband and her brother, and his body cut up and stuffed into 16 polythene bags.

While police says it’s a case of an extra-marital affair gone wrong, the family allege “foul play”. Vipin, who has two kids with his wife, is a native of Beninagar village of Gonda district of Uttar Pradesh. He had joined the IAF in 2009 and was posted at Bhisiana station in May 2014.

He was missing since February 8, after which a search by police and the IAF led to the living quarters of accused Sulesh Kumar, an IAF sergeant, his wife Anuradha, and her brother Shashi Bhushan.

It is alleged that Vipin had got Anuradha pregnant, but was refusing to marry her. She, in turn, has said he was forcing her to continue with the affair despite her unwillingness. Police say that Anuradha hatched the conspiracy, and Sulesh called Vipin to their quarters on the pretext of help in packing some household articles on February 8 evening. That is when the murder was committed with an axe, and the body hacked with a meat cleaver for discreet disposal.

In the meantime, based on a complaint by his wife Kumkum, a case for kidnapping was registered against unknown persons at Nathana police station on February 15. Superintendent of police (SP) Gurmeet Singh said a team of the police and station officials were conducting a search on Tuesday when foul smell emanating from the quarters of Sulesh was observed.

“The killers must be hanged and be made to go through the same pain and torture that my son felt,” said Triveni, who along with other family members was at the Bathinda civil hospital for Vipin’s post-mortem. However, the doctors shifted the body to Government Medical College and Hospital at Faridkot.

Sulesh and Anuradha have already been arrested while Shashi is on the run.

TWO-DAY REMAND

Meanwhile, the Bathinda police got two-day remand of the two arrested accused, to recover the weapon used in the murder besides collecting other clues.

Deputy superintendent of police Kuldeep Singh Sohi said the police had sought seven-day custody.

“We are yet to recover the weapon used in crime, while teams have been dispatched to Uttar Pradesh to nab the third accused, Shashi Bhushan,” Sohi added.


Navy lifts its tipped-over warship

New Delhi, February 22

The Indian Navy has lifted its tipped-over warship INS Betwa back to its sailing position, which is called “at even keel” in sailing parlance.The warship was undergoing a re-fit at the dry dock in Mumbai when it tipped over on December 5. Two persons were killed in the incident. The warship had been lifted from its 90 degree position, Navy spokesperson Capt DK Sharma said in New Delhi today.The warship was undergoing a two-year re-fit cycle that started in April 2016. A re-fit is carried out on ships as maintenance jobs cannot be done at sea. — TNS


‘Unhappy’ veterans vow to defeat BJP; back SP-Cong

Vibha Sharma

Tribune News Service

Lucknow, February 21

They claim to have affected the “outcome” in favour of the BJP-led NDA on “at least 150 seats” in the 2014 Lok Sabha poll.And now in the UP Assembly polls, they are out to punish the incumbent government at the Centre for, what they call, renegading on the “promises” made to them by none other than Modi in the run-up to the 2014 poll at Rewari.Office-bearers of the United Front of Ex-servicemen of India — Maj-Gen Satbir Singh (retd), Group Capt VK Gandhi and Lieut Kameshwar Pandey, who travelled to Lucknow to show solidarity with the SP-Congress combine today—will be making more trips to UP before the last vote is cast.The aim is to urge ex-servicemen to “vote against Modi” in the remaining four phases. Veterans, they say, voted for the BJP in 2014 on the “solemn promise by Narendra Modi at the Rewari rally on September 15 in front of 3.5 lakh veterans that he will approve full OROP to armed forces personnel”.But his government “reneged the promise to soldiers and on November 7, 2015, approved a one-time increment in the garb of OROP”. Claiming to having swayed trends against the Akali-BJP formation in Punjab with its “60 lakh” membership, Singh believes “40 lakh” ex-servicemen in UP can make a difference. “We just want to make a point that those who betrayed us (in OROP grant) should be punished. With our strength, we can easily affect fortunes in 75 to 90 odd seats in the eastern and central parts,” he said.


General Rawat knows the challenges his men face

The scope of cordon and search operations has changed drastically.’
‘Operations are now more focused, intelligence driven and involve very small cordons with minimum inconvenience to the people.’
‘This has been the humanisation of conflict.’
It has come to be institutionalised in the army’s concept.’
‘General Rawat has been schooled in this thinking and when he makes a statement it is with full consciousness of the institutionalised concept,’ says Lieutenant General Syed Ata Hasnain (retd), the former GOC 15 Corps in Srinagar and the officer acclaimed as the ‘People’s General’.

Soldiers conduct search operations, February 12, 2017, after four terrorists, two army personnel and a civilian were killed in a fierce gunfight in a village in south Kashmir. Photographs: Umar Ganie

IMAGE: Soldiers conduct search operations, February 12, 2017, after four terrorists, two army personnel and a civilian were killed in a fierce gunfight in a village in south Kashmir. Photographs: Umar Ganie

 

The Army Chief’s remarks at a recent wreath laying ceremony are too well known to reiterate. Yet a brief backdrop to the same will help.

In three terror-related incidents in the Kashmir Valley, senseless interference by flash mobs at encounter sites resulted in the diversion of focus from the ongoing operations, leading to the loss of six lives of soldiers against eight terrorists killed.

In an environment surcharged by separatist propaganda this phenomenon has been happening since 2015; a new found tactic to protect terrorists and enable their getaway, an adaption of the street protests to the advantage of the terrorists.

In 2015 I did predict that it would finally come to a head, someday. In the interim the army, CRPF and JK police had found temporary answers through some well-crafted SOPs but this could not last.

The Army Chief, a veteran of many encounters in Sopore and Baramula, in empathy with the challenges his officers and men face, and made no bones about the fact that the army would no longer accept such interference by mobs and would take tough measures against those who indulged in acts which were not in support of the security forces.

Neither was this an intemperate remark nor a sanction for freedom to his troops to be indiscreet. It wasn’t even a warning, just a message that the army may not stand still next time it is targeted.

For those less initiated on these issues the Army Chief’s remarks cannot be taken at face value, but given the sharp political divide perceptions will be taken as per convenience.

From the utterances on one side of the divide it appears as if the Army Chief just gave a license to his officers and men to go berserk, be inhuman and generally act the rogue most armies do in such circumstances.

Perhaps to understand the Army Chief better it is best to explain the Indian Army’s concept of operations and the separatist methodology, to get a measure of what the status of the current environment in Kashmir really is.

The Indian Army has progressively softened its operations as the strength of the terrorists dwindled.

Soldiers conduct combing operations in Kashmir after the Uri attack, September 2016. Photograph: Umar Ganie

IMAGE: Soldiers conduct combing operations in Kashmir after the Uri attack, September 2016

 

The concept still revolves around strong counter infiltration at the LoC belt, search and destroy in rural and jungle terrain, precision intelligence based counter-terrorist operations in semi urban and urban areas, secure lines of communication and most importantly, conduct of people friendly operations.

The last is the most important. As the situation improved over the years the scope for people friendly operations increased as did the leeway for restoring dignity to the people.

The scope of cordon and search operations has changed drastically. Operations are now more focused, intelligence driven and involve very small cordons with minimum inconvenience to the people.

The change has even gone to the extent that collateral damage in the conduct of such operations is minimised even at some risk.

Attempts are made to flush the terrorists out and not raze houses to the ground with help of rocket launchers and explosives as was done in the past.

This has been the humanisation of conflict. It has come to be institutionalised in the army’s concept.

General Rawat has been schooled in this thinking and when he makes a statement it is with full consciousness of the institutionalised concept.

Since 2015 the Indian Army’s Victor Force in South Kashmir in particular had observed the change of tactics by the terrorists which were obviously under the guidance and supervision of sponsors from across the LoC.

Temporary solutions to this were found through joint coordination between the army, CRPF and JK police. Only minor casualties were suffered due to the efficacy of the SOPs established.

However, in the three recent encounters, which have all been in North Kashmir, there appeared a pattern of very intense disturbances by flash mobs resulting in fatalities suffered by the army.

It is the army which does the close in and flushing out operations, hence its casualties.

From 2008 the army has witnessed mobs; some of its vehicles have even been burnt.

In 2010 when S A S Geelani threatened to gherao army camps it was the threat issued by the GOC 15 Corps which stood him down and the mob violence ended that year.

In 2016 the army itself did not suffer much damage although its operations were severely affected due to the impact on the police. In stray incidents army vehicles were targeted and it killed at least three civilians in one incident near Qazigund.

Troops take positions to neutralise terrorists at Langate, Kashmir, last October. Photograph: Umar Ganie

IMAGE: Troops take positions to neutralise terrorists at Langate, Kashmir, October 2016.

 

In September 2016 when the decision to induct two brigades into South Kashmir was taken I wrote a piece of advice. It was on the lines that the one thing the army could not afford was the loss of its moral high ground; it was always correct in its approach to the conflict.

The soldiers did not disappoint me as I had reports of stone throwing in Shupiyan town while the army was conducting a medical and vet camp for the local people three km away at their camp at Balapur.

This is the moral high ground I referred to. However, this can all be upset by intemperate behaviour of the locals instigated by leaders who have no qualms about the effects on the lives of ordinary Kashmiris.

None of what the Army Chief has said will adversely affect any of this moral high ground. The army will continue doing all this and even more just as right through the current most adverse winter in 25 years, it has kept its tempo of engagement activities with youth and others at a high pitch.

What it will definitely do is that along with the CRPF and JK police it will get to be much more pro-active in offsetting disturbances by detention of rogue leaders who instigate mobs.

The army will still rescue women in the family way from remote villages, help victims of accidents or natural calamities; none of it will change because the concept of operations remains the same, the Army Chief hasn’t said he is changing any of that.

So what is the hullabaloo about?

It is all about the convenience of interpretation. The only mistake General Bipin Rawat made was that he did not organise a lecture on the concept of army operations, for political leaders and the media in Kashmir, to educate them. There is no doctrinal change either.

The army chief’s words have given a little more freedom to the field commanders to make their operations a little more ‘mob proof.’

How will that be done?

Perfectly situational, as the commanders on the ground will assess, ideate upon and come to their deductions; just as they did earlier in South Kashmir.

So the perfect storm raised is only due to political reasons and for the purpose of a little rabble rousing by the separatist ideologues and their supporters.

The ‘experts’ who love to advise the Indian Army and deeply suspect its military intellect are most upset because apparently the Army Chief’s words have conveyed as if the entire Kashmiri awam is its freshest target.

The traditional army baiters and bashers were at it on the television channels and all those who have a practical orientation to operations and outreach in the valley were the targets.

One could almost hear the Pakistanis snigger at the plight of the Indian Army. Democratic India perceives that the best demonstration of democracy is to demonise its army.

People who have never seriously looked at the domain of information as a weapon are suddenly telling the army that its chief must be temperate while its field commanders can say and do anything.

Honesty and straightforwardness has a price. Those who say that the army’s casualties haven’t been even a small percentage of those suffered in the 1990s must surely be living in cocoons.

In a world driven by social media and the information revolution thank God the army at least is mindful of its casualties, others could be damned.

Having said all the above, the bottom line has to be the fact that the army needs to recover from the successful onslaught of negative propaganda unleashed by unthinking quarters.

It needs to redouble its outreach the way only it has an understanding to do so.

Its knowledge of the sensitivity of the Kashmiri people is beyond doubt and only it can lead the programme to educate the youth that what they do is against their own interest.

Instead of stones there must be books in their hands.

Instead of the skill in aiming stones they must have the skill to work technical equipment and repair it when needed.

Instead of organising endless protests they must have the ability to experiment with their entrepreneurship.

In short, they must be the masters of their destiny to a better life shorn of hatred.

The Indian Army will stand by them in their ventures; they and everyone in the valley know that well enough.

Only it is a little difficult to acknowledge which side their interests lie.

8

Lieutenant Syed Ata Hasnain (retd), former General Officer Commanding of the Srinagar-based 15 Corps, is now associated with the Vivekanand International Foundation and Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies.


Keepers of the faith: Indian Muslims have a unique role to play in resolving Global Islam’s crisisby Lt Gen Syed Ata Hasnain(Retd)

As the Trump era unfolds, disruption of the old order is the flavour of the day. Nowhere is such disruption more profound than in the world of Islam where radical theology has been making strides for some time. There have been various explanations of the phenomenon, from Huntington’s notion of clash of civilisations to theories around today’s churning within Islam being a precursor to reformation within the faith.

Current perceptions arising from the Trump administration’s travel ban against seven Muslim-majority countries (now stayed by a court order) has brought to the fore the paradox of US liberal values pitted against extreme nationalism. The problems of Islam worldwide remain highly diffused with no clarity on the direction the faith wishes to follow. The one common thing is the general negativity with which followers of the faith appear to be universally viewed.

India has almost 180 million Muslims, the world’s largest minority segment. How should common people view Islam? Its conundrum is getting more complex by the day making it difficult for people to comprehend what exactly they are up against. It is equally important for Indian Muslims to realise their unique position.

Among the important issues remain the development differential between the Western Christian world and the core centre of Islam, the Middle East; as also the socio-political systems revolving around the conservatism of Islam’s values and the lack of modernism in political thought.

Muslims around the world have to realise that the sectarian divide within Islam can only lead it to doom. The Shia versus Sunni conflict is forcing both groups to withdraw deeper within the folds of conservative thinking to protect their beliefs.

The crisis within the Sunni sect is profound due to the rise of obscurantist sub sects. The Shia linkage with Iran involves them in an apparently eternal conflict with the US and its allies ever since the Iranian Revolution of 1979.

Geopolitics mixed with faith based conflict has settled into the Middle East. The Saudis fear dilution of their control as keepers of the faith. This fear arises from two causes: first, their reduction in US perceptions of strategic importance due to the changing profiles and narratives of worldwide energy resources, demand and technology; second, due to the perceived rise in Iranian ambitions leading to its potentially greater domination of the Levant, presence of the Hezbollah, the likely victory of Bashar Assad in Syria and the Iraqi Shia domination of Northern Iraq.

All the above is a complex handful. As if that is not enough, there is Europe and its problem with migration, both old and new. The older Muslim migrants are facing a generational problem which is preventing the integration of their young. At the same time many of them are being misled by Islamic State (IS) propaganda to rise against the West. On a different count Erdogan’s Turkey is in the midst of a counter revolution, almost reversing the secular and benign Islam promoted by Kemal Ataturk a century ago.

Islam therefore appears highly unsettled and we have not even begun to describe the problems of Central and South Asia. Afghanistan promises to be in the throes of internal conflict for much longer as the Taliban is unlikely to relent and the US presence may just increase once Trump is a little more settled. Jammu & Kashmir, a conflict with more political than ideological or faith based differences, has slowly drifted.

The separatist camp has no qualms about using faith as a weapon. Pakistan remains the hub of radical Islam both as a counterweight to Shia Iran and the promoter of faith based conflict in Kashmir. Its strategic importance continues to draw US and Chinese support.

Bangladesh remains high strung about the violence within, said to be IS influenced yet having extremely local overtones in a society sharply divided over culture-led nationalism against radical Islam.

Where do Indian Muslims stand, and how should they perceive the situation in the Islamic world? They must understand that they enjoy the benefits and rights of full scale democracy which few of their co-religionists are fortunate to possess or experience across the world. Even as Islam struggles to balance itself in the Middle East and other regions, Indian Muslims are already balanced and must therefore project this to the Islamic world. They have rejected radicalism to a great extent, although no one can deny the fact that efforts to turn their minds have not yet diminished.

The educated and evolved Indian Muslim community must come out to engage with conservative Muslims whose fears may still be alive. Living in many isolated areas in smaller towns and cities there are a large number who are still poverty-stricken and unsure of themselves. As Islam witnesses turf and sectarian battles elsewhere, Indian Muslims must shun them, battle poverty and enhance their social empowerment. They should avoid becoming pawns in the larger games of other nations.

The decision of their parents, to remain in India and be Indian should be deeply respected. It is the duty of the Indian Muslim clergy to protect their community from negative influence and project their will to be model followers of the Islamic faith; eventually virtual role models for the reformation which is bound to come within Islam.

http://blogs.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/toi-edit-page/keepers-of-the-faith-indian-muslims-have-a-unique-role-to-play-in-resolving-global-islams-crisis/