Sanjha Morcha

App for Army veterans in Telangana, Andhra ::Will help them book online appointments with doctors at all ECHS polyclinics

Suresh Dharur

Tribune News Service

Hyderabad, January 18

In a novel initiative, a mobile app has been launched here to enable the ex-servicemen to book online appointments with doctors at all Ex-servicemen Contributory Health Scheme (ECHS) polyclinics in the two Telugu states of Telangana and Andhra Pradesh.The app allows veterans to book online appointment with doctors/physiotherapists and also enables them to submit their feedback as grievances or suggestions. The initiative is a first of its kind in the organisation with the app being made available on Android phones and can be accessible on www.tasaechs.in, said Colonel Anil Kumar, Director, ECHS.“The project has a vast scope for expansion in future,” Colonel Kumar said.


Two die as Army truck hits rickshaw

Our Correspondent

Ferozepur, January 16

Two persons were killed and another injured when the rickshaw they were riding on was allegedly hit by one of the military trucks in a cavalcade that was passing through the railway crossing near Government College at Mohkam Khan Wala village on the Ferozepur-Zira road today.The deceased have been identified as Barkat Singh of Mohkam Khan Wala and his nephew Aakash, while Sohan Singh has been admitted to a hospital with serious injuries.Police officials, including DSP Jaspal Singh and SHO (Ferozepur Cantt) Navin Sharma, reached the spot and took stock of the situation. The Army truck was impounded and a case was registered at the Ferozepur Cantt police station.


Reprising ’84 cases Victims’ hope rests on new SIT

Reprising ’84 cases

NEARLY 34 years after the 1984 riots, the Supreme Court’s order to reinvestigate 186 cases of violence against Sikhs following the assassination of Indira Gandhi comes with a renewed hope of justice. Over the years, powerful instigators and perpetrators of the riots getting clean chits fed the angst of the victims, who had not only lost their loved ones, but also their businesses and homes. They suffered as many of the accused continued to flourish — notably Congress leaders Jagdish Tytler and HKL Bhagat. The victims have, despite being down and under and hitting the wall time and again, steadfastly braved the rounds of courts and they did not give up their quest. The political parties’ efforts to appease the wounded community by setting up commissions to look into the cases in which over 3,000 Sikhs were slaughtered, purportedly in complicity with the administration of the day, have failed. Too few convictions, and grossly under-proportional sentences, showed such commissions to be mere vote-garnering exercises. The new SIT, entrusted with prising open the old cases, holds promise. It has been set up by the Supreme Court and the judge named for the exercise, Justice SN Dhingra, has a track record of bold judgments and scathing strictures while dealing with such cases. He will be on familiar territory. During the 1990s, as Sessions Judge in the Karkardooma Court in Delhi, he incarcerated senior Congress minister Bhagat in an anti-Sikh riot instance. Then, he castigated the Delhi Police for their chaotic manner of prosecution of hundreds of cases spread all over Delhi. As a result, 100 cases were clubbed together and the trial streamlined. Again, it was Dhingra who convicted and sentenced Kishori Lal, dubbed the “butcher of Trilokpuri”, and the other accused of a grisly massacre of 1984.This SIT has two months to present its status report to the SC. There is hope, but also the ever-present fear of politicians using the reopening of the cases for political shenanigans. Justice has been inordinately delayed; it must be delivered so that the victims’ families get a sense of closure.


China exerting pressure along LAC, but India prepared: Rawat

China exerting pressure along LAC, but India prepared: Rawat
“China is a powerful country but we are not a weak nation… Both sides have increased patrol intensity so the contacts (troops coming face to face) are increasing… Whenever an intrusion takes place, we will defend” — General Bipin Rawat, Army Chief

Tribune News Service

New Delhi, January 12

Army Chief General Bipin Rawat today accepted that China was exerting pressure along the Line of Actual Control (LAC) but said India would defend every such intrusion.There is no settled border between the neighbours and the 3,488-km LAC is the de facto boundary. Addressing a press conference ahead of Army Day, he said: “China is a powerful country but we are not a weak nation.”When asked if the media reports indicating increased activity by the Chinese along the LAC were correct, he said: “Both sides have increased patrol intensity so the contacts (troops coming face to face) are increasing. The varying perception of the LAC is causing overlapping claims but we have mechanism to counter the same.”(Follow The Tribune on Facebook; and Twitter @thetribunechd)“Whenever an intrusion takes place, we will defend,” he said, citing the recent incident at Tuting in Arunachal Pradesh where India confiscated Chinese road-building equipment. “There are other areas where we are vulnerable due to lack of infrastructure. We have allocated troops which will take care.” He said a hotline was coming up at the DGMO level between India and China that could sort out the increased number of intrusions.“At the military level, our focus has to shift to the northern borders. For too long we have focused on western border,” Gen Rawat said. “To say that it will be an attrition battle and to think that China will come rolling down the hills, it may not happen,” he added.‘China sits on north Doklam’General Rawat said up to June 2016 it was an innocuous activity, but in June 2017 it became serious, so they intervened. The de-escalation has happened.“They may come back here after winter or somewhere else. Should they come again, we will see what to do. In the west of Torsa nullah called northern Doklam, the People’s Liberation Army of China has occupied the area. At the actual spot the two sides have disengaged. The tanks and guns that had moved in are gone. The tents remain. The observation posts remain. This is a territory disputed between Bhutan and China,” he said.‘Will call Pak’s nuke bluff’Gen Rawat said: “If Pakistan raises a nuclear bogey, we will have to call their bluff. We cannot say that we will not cross the border because they have nuclear weapons. We will have to call their bluff.”On the US admonition to Pakistan, he said it would be premature to say that everything is going to be in our favour and the US will do our job what we are expected to do vis-a-vis Pakistan. We have to do our own job. On being asked about the preparation of a simultaneous two-front war with Pakistan and China, he said: “We are ready for this contingency. We have plans to deal with this.”Capping fee for disabled’s kidsOn the issue of capping tuition fees for children of disabled soldiers and those killed in the line of duty, General Rawat said the Army would set up premier educational institutions to educate them. He said that as some people were misusing the facility, the government decided to impose a cap of Rs10,000 a year for a student. However, as some genuine students were being affected by this, Army proposed a new framework to continue the policy.


Armed forces day :::14 jan 2018 ::Manekshaw Centre ::DELHI CANTT :1000H ONWARDS

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The Armed Forces Veterans’ Day in India will henceforth be celebrated every year on the 14th January. This commemorates the date of the retirement of the first ever Field Marshal for the Indian Armed Forces Field Marshal KM Cariappa, OBE.
The coming 14th Jan will thus be a big day and the Veterans all over the country will be celebrating it as per their own formation programs.
Delhi has planned this event in a very big way.
Our Raksha Mantri and the three Services Chiefs will be attending. The program will start at 10 AM and will end with a high tea for the attending veterans & families. Snacks etc will be available at the venue on payment as well.
Stalls will be put up by almost every agency connected with the welfare of the Service Veterans. The DAV and the AFA will be there at full strength.
All veterans of the Indian Armed Forces residing in Delhi NCR / outside are invited. It will be nice and appropriate to wear your medals and the entitled side caps. Family pensioners are also invited. Please come prepared with your documents and their xerox copies for resolving your queries on the spot, or later on, as the case may be.
Please share this post on your timeline so that maximum number of Veterans get informed and are able to take advantage of this Veterans’ Rally.
This year, it is an Indian Air Force Show.
Let’s make it a grand success.

Our pixilated Pakistan policy Mixing terrorism and talks in Bangkok

Our pixilated Pakistan policy

The Modi Government appears to be escaping some searching questions on its Pakistan policy. For three years now, it has held Pakistan at arm’s length; New Delhi spends significant energy in naming and shaming Pakistan for abetting cross-border terrorism. There have been moments, such as after a particularly fulfilling peroration against Pakistan in the UN, when South Block has patted itself for ensuring its “diplomatic isolation”, as if to justify its strategy of refusing to break bread till Islamabad abandons using terrorism as an instrument of state policy. In particular two self-styled imams, widely considered as proxies of the Pakistan army, are in New Delhi’s cross sights. The naming of Masood Azhar as a UN-designated terrorist has been frontloaded on the Sino-India bilateral agenda, never mind that the other Imam, Hafiz Saeed does not appear to be worse-off despite a US bounty on his head.India’s ire at Pakistan’s cosseting of the two Imams is sound and reasonable: both Masood Azhar and Hafiz Saeed have considerable Indian blood on their hands. There is no harm in sustaining a policy of sullen coldness to make Pakistan mend its ways; India even threw a fit when the Palestine’s Pakistan envoy briefly shared the stage with Hafiz Saeed and forced his recall. However, it now appears that India’s security czar Ajit Doval secretly met his Pakistani counterpart in Bangkok. There must have been exceptionally compelling reasons for the Indian NSA to confabulate with a Pakistani a day after South Block fulminated over Islamabad’s ill-treatment of the wife and mother of imprisoned Indian Kulbhushan Jadhav.An impression appears to be gaining ground that the desh bhakts are playing both sides of the coin: regularly chastising Pakistan for all challenges and tribulations, real or invented, while holding secret consultations on the side. A responsible public figure is yet to explain this double-play when the downside of a muddled approach is evident: over 100 security personnel killed last year in Kashmir because of an unremitting tense situation. The Government owes an explanation for its approach on Pakistan that seems to wax and wane, almost on whim.


PM’s Davos address today, to meet business honchos

PM’s Davos address today, to meet business honchos

Zurich, January 22

Prime Minister Narendra Modi today arrived here on way to Davos to attend the World Economic Forum meeting where he would share his vision for India’s future engagements with the international community.After reaching Davos, he would be meeting Swiss President Alain Berset today. The Prime Minister would also attend the welcome reception by India and later host a dinner for global CEOs. Modi would deliver the opening plenary address at the WEF summit tomorrow. He is scheduled to have a bilateral meeting with Swedish Prime Minister Stefan Lofven in Davos.(Follow The Tribune on Facebook; and Twitter @thetribunechd)“On his way to Davos, PM @narendramodi arrives in Zurich. First visit by Indian PM to #Davos in 20 years! PM would make a keynote speech at the Plenary of the #WorldEconomicForum, address International Business Council and interact with CEOs. #IndiaMeansBusiness,” an External Affairs Ministry spokesperson tweeted.Tomorrow, Modi would interact with global business community members, besides delivering his keynote address. The theme for this year’s summit is ‘Creating a Shared Future in a Fractured World’. In his departure statement on Sunday, the PM had said India’s engagement with the outside world in the recent years has become “truly and effectively multi-dimensional covering the political, economic, people to people, security and other spheres”. — PTI


CHINA STEPS INTO THE VACUUM LEFT BY THE US

CHINA’S WILLINGNESS TO INVEST WITHOUT POLITICAL PRECONDITION IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES IN EVERY REGION MAKES IT AN ATTRACTIVE ALTERNATIVE TO THE US

In October 2017, Xi Jinping delivered the most consequential speech since Mikhail Gorbachev announced the dissolution of the Soviet Union. Addressing the Communist Party’s 19th Party Congress, Xi made clear that China is ready to claim its share of global leadership.

As he begins his second five-year term, Xi has consolidated enough power at home to redefine China’s external environment and set new rules within it. His timing is perfect; China is stepping forward just at the moment that a politically embattled and distracted US president is scaling back US commitment to traditional allies and alliances. The United States has created a vacuum, and China stands ready to fill it.

For decades, western leaders have assumed that a new Chinese middle class would force China’s leaders to liberalise the country’s politics. Instead, it is western democracy that now appears under siege as citizens, angry over the toll that globalisation has taken on their lives and livelihoods, demand change and governments fail to deliver. Democracy itself is threatened by a weakening of public confidence in traditional political parties, the reliability of public information, and the inviolability of voting.

By contrast, China’s leaders have delivered steady advances in the country’s prosperity and a rising sense of China’s importance for the world. Old problems like repression, censorship, corruption, and pollution remain, but measurable progress in many areas of life give China’s people a confidence in their leaders that many Americans and Europeans no longer have.

What does this mean for the world? For trade and investment, China is the only country with a global strategy. With its vast Belt-Road project and its willingness to invest – without political precondition – in developing countries in every region, China is scaling up its ambitions even as Europe focuses on European problems and trade becomes a dirty word in US politics. Governments across Asia, Latin America, Africa, and the Middle East are now more likely to align with, and imitate, China’s explicitly transactional approach to foreign policy.

Then there is the global battle for technological dominance. In particular, the US and China now lead the charge on investment in artificial intelligence. For the US, this leadership comes from the private sector. In China, it comes from the state, which directs the country’s powerful companies in ways that serve state interests.

China’s appeal is not ideological. The only political value Beijing exports is the principle of non-interference in other countries’ affairs. Yet, that’s attractive for governments that are used to western demands for political and economic reform in exchange for financial help. With the advent of Trump’s “America first” foreign policy and the many distractions for Europe’s leaders, there is no counter to China’s non-values-driven approach to commerce and diplomacy.

There are obvious limits to China’s international appeal. It will be decades before China can exert the sort of global military power that the US can. China remains a regional power, and the military spending gap continues to widen in the US’ favour. Nor are China’s neighbours comfortable with Beijing’s ability to project force near their borders. But conventional military power is less important for international influence today than it has ever been, given the threats to national security posed in a globalised world by the potential weaponisation of economic influence and the unclear balance of power in cyberspace.

We should also expect Japan, India, Australia, and South Korea to work together more often to limit China’s regional power, creating risks of friction and even conflict. Depending on the state of US-China relations, the Trump administration might become more active in the region, as well.

For Americans and Europeans, China’s system holds little appeal. For most everyone else, the China model offers a plausible alternative. With Xi ready and willing to offer that alternative, this is the world’s biggest geopolitical risk in 2018. Ian Bremmer is the president of Eurasia Group and author of Superpower: Three Choices for America’s Role in the World The views expressed are personal


Sepoy’s last rites performed with full honours in Panipat village

Sepoy’s last rites performed with full honours in Panipat village
Army personnel salute Sepoy Sachin Sharma at the government school of Goela Khurd in Panipat on Thursday. Tribune photo

Tribune News Service

Goela Khurd (Panipat), January 18Hundreds of people, Army officials and politicians bid a tearful adieu to Sepoy Sachin Sharma at his native village Goela Khurd of the district today. Sachin was laid to rest with full military and police honour. Sachin’s brother Sahil lit the pyre.Army personnel of Jat Regiment reached the village with Sachin’s mortal remains at 9 am and hundreds of villagers, school students were also present to salute their hero.The Army officials handed over the body of the martyr to his father and bid adieu at a government school of the village.Surender Sharma, father of the Martyr, Sachin, said, his son wanted to join the Indian Army since his childhood and after passing class XII he joined the Army on December 12, 2016. After completing his training at Fatehpur he joined his duty at Arunachal Pradesh.“Sachin always said that he would join The Army to save his country and would die for his country,” said his father with eyes filled with tears. His mother Sumitra Devi and sisters fainted after seeing Sachin’s body.His last rites were performed at a temple adjoining a government school. The Army personnel and police gave him a gun salute. People raised slogans such as ‘Bharat Mata Ki Jai’, ‘Vande Mataram’ and ‘Sachin Bhai Amar Rahe’.Subedar Ramesh Kumar, Rajputana Rifle, said, he was a good sepoy and a very good player also. He had joined his duty around two months back and was posted at Arunachal Tak Singh post in Upeer Subhan Singh district of Arunachal Pradesh.Besides, a team of 24 Army personnel led by Subedar Kamal Singh of Jat regiment reached to bid adieu to Sepoy Sachin Sharma.“Due to sudden illness, Sachin lost his life. Reports will further clear the reason behind his death,” said the Subedar.Mohit and Sonu, friends of Sachin said, he was a hard worker since his childhood. He practiced running barefoot on the Yamuna sand to enhance his stamina.Krishan Lal Panwar, Transport Minister, said, benefits would be provided to the bereaved family as per the government’s norms and policy.Ashok Tanwar, state president, Congress; Ravinder Machroli, MLA Samalkha; Sanajay Bhatia, BJP’s state general secretary; Bijender Kadyan, former minister; DC Chander Shekhar Khare; SP Rahul Sharma along with administrative officials and leaders of various political parties were present during the cremation.


A General & his loquaciousness by Harish Khare

Creeping militarisation of foreign policy discourse

A General & his loquaciousness
Ravi Parkash

Harish Khare

WE have been fortunate to have had a very large number of distinguished military leaders. There was a General KM Cariappa to begin with; then we had Marshal of the IAF Arjan Singh, General Sam Manekshaw, General K Sundarji, General Ved Malik, General S Padmanabhan. Other chiefs were not insubstantial leaders of men, either. Each led the force in the trying and exacting contexts of his time. But, perhaps, none was heard so often and so loudly as the present Chief, General Bipin Rawat. And, it needs to be noted that he remains unrebuked by the civilian-political leadership for his garrulity.In recent days, he hit the headlines with regularity. More than a month ago, he took it upon himself to respond to Pakistani army chief General Bajwa’s formulations before the Pakistani parliament. It was a significant speech, given the power-sharing arrangement in Pakistan. Its moderate tone and its expression of hope for some kind of normalcy between India and Pakistan were at variance with our officially-inspired understanding that it is the Pakistani generals who have acquired an institutional interest in enmity with India. It was too cute, too neat to be true, for our taste. The Ministry of External Affairs spokesperson, quietly and professionally, dealt with General Bajwa. Still, a few days later, inexplicably, our own Army Chief felt that he was called upon to rubbish the Pakistani General’s contrived overture. And then, a few days ago, General Rawat allowed himself to comment at a press conference on the educational system in Jammu and Kashmir and the imperfections and inadequacies of the textbooks in the government schools in the state. The good general pontificated on the “madarsas and masjids”. It was as political a statement as it could be; the General had chosen to stray into the politicians’ domain. And inevitably, invited the malicious politicians’ retort. Not at all a pretty sight. Curiously enough, there has been no indication as to what the South Block thinks of the Indian Army Chief’s loquaciousness. On the other hand, the usual suspects have started making the usual noises, in the print and on the social media, in defence of the Chief.Admittedly, considerable merit can be conceded in what the General had to say about the contents of the textbooks in Kashmir and about the nature of the larger process of ‘radicalisation’ in the Valley. But the pertinent point has to be that the offending textbooks were not introduced this week. For better or worse, these books have been part of the school curriculum for a while. And again, for better or worse, the ruling party at the Centre has been in power as a coalition partner in Jammu and Kashmir for many years. There is no public record of the BJP, either at the Centre or in the state, having made an issue of the unsuitability of these textbooks.If there is so overwhelmingly self-evident justification in the Chief’s observations, why have the “nationalist” voices kept quiet all these years? The vigilant and zealous deshbhakts must be very familiar with these “unacceptable” textbooks, yet they continue to be part of a self-serving power-sharing arrangement in the state. It must be presumed that the Chief had first raised this matter of Jammu and Kashmir’s education system within the inner councils of the national security apparatus. He possibly felt unattended and unsatisfied, and thought strongly enough about it to go public; whatever the context, he crossed a line, forcing everyone to take a position. However, there is another, old-fashioned name for this: agenda setting. That is not a one-off affair. For some time now, the Army Chief has regularly articulated very strongly— and, very bluntly — on the difficulties in our relationships with China and Pakistan. He has casually suggested crossing the border and has talked of calling Pakistan’s nuclear bluff. Granted, soldiers are not diplomats; granted, they are not well versed in the art of nuances and subtleties of diplomacy; but, it can well be asked, pray, why encroach upon the Foreign Office’s territory. The General’s volubility has been in direction proportion to the marked reticence, almost radio silence from the authorised managers and professional caretakers of the bluff and bluster of national security. Most mysteriously, we do not hear from the Raksha Mantri or the External Affairs Minister on these vital issues of national security.    On the other hand, we have a political dispensation that believes in and advocates a “strong” India; it projects itself as being more muscular than others in matters of national security and defence. It is not averse to encashing electorally and politically the soldier’s sacrifice and martyrdom. During the recent elections in Uttar Pradesh, Himachal Pradesh and Gujarat, “surgical strikes” became part of the politicians’ narrative.It ought to be clearly understood that even the most professional and most detached solider is not exactly a robot. He can size up the political crowd and its weaknesses — and, can most definitely smell the politician’s need for “success” against this or that “enemy”. What happens if an ambitious general senses the politician’s dependence upon the soldier for an electoral coup? What happens if the generals and the admirals begin to think of themselves as indispensable to a regime’s political fortunes? For now, it has suited the government’s electoral calculations to talk up the soldier. In turn, the soldier is fired up. The air is full of violence, hostility and aggression.A stage may come when it may not be all that easy to roll back this militarisation of our political narrative; it may not be easy to ignore the generals’ demarche. When a Nitin Gadkari dares to talk sense on the Navy’s demand for land in South Mumbai, the poor minister gets excoriated for wanting to deny the armed forces what is due to them.When claims made in the name of national security get pushed up on top of the national attention, a certain distortion creeps in. As it is, without our wanting, we have ended up countenancing a militarisation of our foreign policy and diplomacy. Are we comfortable with the idea of a general usurping the political leader’s prerogative? At the end of the day, it is difficult not to feel uncomfortable about the space and the visibility the Army Chief has come to command.