Sanjha Morcha

Lull on border, tension intact Villagers in shelter camps told not to shift back yet

Lull on border,  tension intact

A villager displays tailfin of a mortar shell in RS Pura. Tribune Photo

Amit Khajuria

Tribune News Service

Jammu, May 24

With guns falling silent after days together, there was an uneasy tranquility along the 198-km-long International Border (IB) on Thursday. Wary, most border residents were reluctant to return home. But the more plucky among them decided to see for themselves the damage done to their houses, fields and the livestock.“Though the shelling has stopped, tension persists. We came home to preserve the grain stored inside our houses and to take care of our cattle,” said Gardhari Lal of Treva village in Arnia sector. Not taking any chances, the administration has requested those in shelter camps to stay put, or shift to safer places. “We apprehend that Pakistan may resume firing if they go back to their villages right now. We need to wait and watch,” explained Arun Manhas, Additional DC, Jammu.The relentless shelling for nine days in a row took the lives of nine civilians and two BSF jawans and left 60 persons injured. It started on the intervening night of May 14-15 when a BSF jawan was killed as he repelled aCeasefire violation in Uri sectorSrinagar/Kupwara: Pakistan violated the ceasefire along the Line of Control in north Kashmir’s Uri sector on the intervening night of Wednesday and Thursday and targeted Army posts in Kamalkote sector of Baramulla district. The firing was retaliated. There was no loss of life or injury. TNSn infiltration attempt in the Samba sector. 


Submission of false info by RSB Bhopal about Veteran Major Ajeet Singh Mac

                                                     

DGNTN/ASM/07/2018                                          16 MAY 2018
 Applicant:- (IC 25377 P Major) Ajeet Singh Mac
  TO :-
             . Gen (Dr) V K Singh PVSM,AVSM,YSM (Retd)
                Hon’ble Union Minister
                Govt of India    
                NEW  DELHI-110011
                SUB :– Submission of false info by RSB Bhopal 
                 Ref:-      Your ministry’s official letter & reminder 
                                dated 19 APR 2018
   Rev. Your kind honor 
     I feel honored to make a humble submission regarding review of my    pension case pending with RSB MP Govt Bhopal . My self explanatory   application is appended below . The following are bullet points are    highlighted:-
   2 (a)  Director Sainik Welfare M P Govt of M P Bhopal is ignoring the  directions issued by your ministry dated 20 FEB 2018 & reminder issued on 19 APR 2018. 
 
       (b)  Directive of Lt Gen K H Singh PVSM,UYSM,VSM , Commandant 
               Inf School Mhow dated 02 APR 2016 is also being overlooked. In
               addition , following bottlenecks of the case need looking into:-
               (I)  Director RSB M P Govt Bhopal has given false info to Secy KSB  that I resigned my commission due to Blue Star operation, whereas    I took release on medical grounds & was released in permanant    low medical category with 30% disability.
               (II) I served as DSWO on selection by PSC & was on probation wef  02 OCT 1986 for ONE year & thereafter deemed permanent till  20 JAN1993.
               (III)  I have an unblemished record of service of over 20 years plus &     was always released with full honors & flowers. ( WEF 22 JUL 70 to 12 JAN 1985 & wef 02 OCT 1986 to 20 JAN 1993 as          DSWO with M P Govt i.e. Total of 20 years & one month).    
                (IV)  Holding of pension , in spite of clear orders of M P Govt , copy already sent , it is unfair & unjust .     . 
                 (V)   Case for grant of pension was initiated by Directorate vide his    letter no 227/Estt/DSW/2012/863  dated 15 MAR 2012.
                 (VI)  It is a singular unique case in the history of RSB M P Govt Bhopal. as recommended by Brig R K Sharma (Retd) , Gen Secy Veterans       India New Delhi-78 .​ Secy KSB MOD New Delhi is ignoring the   directions  of Joint Secy , MOD GOI NEW  DELHI !!!!​
                 

                 (VII) Going to court for justice is a costly affair since it will take over  20 years & a loan of Rs 05 lacs is required for ​initiating ​it. 

          In the light of above I request you for personal indulgence & may desire to    appeal to Hon’ble  Chief Minister for intervention ( since acknowledged by    him dated 01 JUN 2012 in response to a request by Smt Sumitra Mahajan ,  Member of Parliament to help me) .
             I sincerely pray that justice will prevail to allow an ailing soldier die in peace.
          Yours Faithfully 
 
         Major  Ajeet Singh Mac  
           CC TO:- For urgent kind intervention please
                             
            Video link of National Convention Veterans India is attached.

Militants attack army patrol in Bandipora district of J&K

Militants attack army patrol in Bandipora district of J&K

Srinagar, May 18

An army patrol was attacked on Friday by militants in Jammu and Kashmir’s Bandipora district. No casualties were reported.The patrol party of the army was fired at by militants in Hajin area, army sources said.“There was a brief exchange of fire, following which the militants escaped. There was no casualty on our side. The area was cordoned off for searches,” sources added.This is the first incident of an attack on the security forces by militants after the Union Home Ministry announced non-initiation of combat operations during the holy month of Ramadan.The security forces have been advised not to initiate operations against militants and use weapons only in self-defence.The Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) militant outfit has rejected the ceasefire announced by the central government. IANS 


Extend e-ticket facility to small rly stations: Army

Tribune News Service

New Delhi, May 12

The Army has taken up with the Railways and the Principal Controller of Defence Accounts the issue of e-ticket facility to be extended till the last possible station for jawans going home on leave.The Defence Travel System, a specialised online e-ticket system for armed forces, does not allow booking of e-tickets up to small railway stations. Most troops hail from smaller rural places where long distance trains do not halt. A jawan going home on leave is issued an e-ticket to the nearest railway station till the reservation is possible. For the onward journey, the jawan has to manage at his own expense and arrangement.The jawan returning home on leave has to get down from the train while carrying his baggage and then stand in a queue to book his ticket in another train going to his home. At times, the wait can be daylong and many jawans opt to do the journey on bus.The Defence Travel System was introduced about a year ago. The old system of issue of warrants was stopped. A warrant issued from the forces allowed the jawans to switch trains without waiting for a ticket at the main station.


MARSHAL ARJAN SINGH MEMORIAL HOCKEY TOURNAMENT IAF, Punjab Police in final Punjab Police beat Indian Navy; IAF oust SC Railway in semis

IAF, Punjab Police in final

Tribune News Service

Chandigarh, May 11

Indian Air Force will face Punjab Police in the final of the inaugural Marshal Arjan Singh Memorial Hockey Tournament here on Saturday.In the semifinals played here on Friday, Punjab Police registered a 6-3 win over Indian Navy, while IAF overcame South Central (SC) Railway 2 -1. Gurvinder Singh Chandi scored the opening goal for Punjab Police in the 8th minute of the match, but Indian Navy restored the parity just two later through Parteek Singh. Punjab Police regained the lead in the 22nd minute with a Gurbaj Singh strike before Karanbir Singh made it 3-1 for the side in the 34th minute. Indian Navy tried their best to make a comeback into the match and finally succeeded in reducing the deficit when Mohit Singh struck for the side in the 53rd minute. However, back-to-back goals by Dharmvir Singh (55th and 58th minute) dented their hopes of revival. Rana Pratap scored a goal for the side in the 59th minute but it was never going to be sufficient as Jasjit Singh Khullar struck for Punjab police in the 68th minute to seal an easy 6-3 win for the team. Dharmavir was adjudged the Best Player of the match.In the second semifinal, Sukhdev Singh scored a brace to help the hosts IAF beat South Central Railway. Sukhdev netted the first goal in the 18th minute and completed a brace in the 44th minute to put IAF 2-0 ahead.MG Poonacha reduced the deficit in the 49th but the IAF held on to the slender lead for the remaining part of the game to set up the title clash with Punjab Police.  IAF goalkeeper Pooanna PE was named the Best Player of the match.


Kim visits China again

BEIJING: China’s President Xi Jinping and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un held talks over two days in the northeastern Chinese coastal city of Dalian, state media reported on Tuesday.

AP■ Kim Jong Un (left) and Xi Jinping in Dalian.

This was the second summit between the two leaders in about 40 days, with Kim having travelled to Beijing for a secret meeting in March ahead of a summit between the leaders of North and South Korea.

The meeting on May 7 and 8 was unannounced as well, with confirmation coming only when China’s state media announced it and published a photo of Xi and Kim taking a stroll on a beach.

The meeting was held days after Kim and South Korean President Moon Jae-in met for a historic summit in Panmunjom in April and ahead of the much anticipated meeting between Kim and US President Donald Trump, expected in the coming weeks.

Kim’s visit to Beijing in March was his first international trip after he assumed power, sending out a signal that China remained a crucial player in the Korean peninsula. The second meeting cements that notion further.

Though it wasn’t described as such, the reports in the state media suggested the meeting between Kim and Xi was apparently “informal” in nature.

This is only the third time that Xi has travelled outside Beijing to meet a leader. The only two one-on-one meetings with a leader outside the national capital were with Prime Minister Narendra Modi in Xian and Wuhan.

The official Xinhua news agency quoted Xi as having said: “After the first meeting between me and Comrade Chairman, both China-DPRK relations and the Korean Peninsula situation have made positive progress. I feel happy about it.”

Kim was quoted as saying that bilateral ties and the situation on the Korean Peninsula had undergone meaningful progress since March. “These are the positive outcomes of the historic meeting between me and Comrade General Secretary,” he said.


Footprints of India and China’s economies Pritam Singh

The economic growth of India and China, the world’s leading producers of carbon dioxide emissions, has scary environmental implications. However, India is way below the West in terms of per capita emissions and cannot achieve a simplistic trade-off between growth and emissions.

Footprints of India and China’s economies

Pritam Singh

Professor of Economics, Oxford Brookes University, UKIn terms of per capita income, China and India are still in the category of developing economies, but in view of their increasing share in the global GDP, they are now major economic powers. China replaced the USA as the world’s biggest manufacturer in 2010 and overtook it as the top economy in 2014 in terms of its GDP at purchasing power parity. India overtook Japan in 2011 as the third largest economy in the world. China and India together, with 2.7 billion people, encompass 36 per cent of the world’s population. Given this, even if their per capita incomes are lower than the advanced economies, the size of their GDPs means a massive environmental footprint of their economies nationally as well as globally. China and India can no longer hide their national and global environmental responsibilities under the pretext which was perhaps partially valid a few decades ago: that they needed to develop and, therefore, protecting planet Earth from the harmful consequences of global climate change was their lesser concern. China’s share of global GDP was as low as 2.3 per cent in 1980, even lower than India’s at that time, but it jumped to a record 18.3 per cent in 2017. According to an estimate, if the current Sino-Indian growth rates persist, by 2050, they would be the dominant global suppliers of manufactured goods and services, respectively.

Scary environmental implications

The impressive looking economic growth scenario has scary environmental implications. China and India are now among the top producers of carbon dioxide emissions whose implications for pollution and global warming are most serious. In absolute terms, China current carbon dioxoide emissions are more than that of the USA. In fact, China’s carbon dioxide emissions are more than those of the USA and the European Union combined. After China, the USA and the EU, India is the fourth largest carbon dioxide emitter followed closely by Russia. One of the largest concerns is the rise in global warming which is defined as the rise in average temperature of the earth’s atmosphere in comparison with the pre-industrial levels. It is leading to unpredictable weather changes, rising sea levels, floods and droughts, and global agricultural and energy crisis.China has had phenomenal manufacturing growth due to low labour costs in international comparative terms. The full environmental implications of that growth are now manifesting themselves in a vicious manner. Pollution in China’s urban manufacturing centres has risen to threatening levels. According to one study done on 74 cities in China, around a third of the deaths in these cities were smog related and the total number has reached 3 million. On the worst days, the  government makes it mandatory for residents to stay indoors and this has happened several times in Beijing. Delhi faced a somewhat similar situation last summer. Environmental change does not recognise any boundaries. With this smog travelling with the wind, it affects neighbouring countries too.

China’s environmental initiatives

China seems to be showing some awareness of the dangers involved. Some of its environmental initiatives are worth noting and emulating by India. China now is one of the largest pioneers in the renewable energy sector and aims to have 20 per cent of energy coming from renewables by 2030. Another project to help reverse the effects of climate change relates to creating large areas of forest, which were previously used for mining and factories. China announced this January that it is planning to plant a forest of 6.6 million hectares, roughly the size of Ireland, and aims to make 25 per cent of China a forest by 2020, compared to the current 21.7 per cent. Also, with China’s manufacturing sector being so strong, it has invested heavily in the production of solar cells, becoming the largest shareholder for solar heating. As a result of the cost-effective production, it has been able to make the electricity produced by the solar panels competitive with the cost of electricity produced by fossil fuels such as oil and gas. Also, it is now the world’s largest producer of hydroelectric power which, of course, is environmentally a contested form of power, especially if based on large dams.These environmental initiatives are challenged by the fact that China accounts for half of the global consumption of coal. Coal is the dirtiest of all fossil fuels and its consumption has to be cut drastically. This holds true for India, too.

India’s progress

India has made some good progress with renewables, mainly wind and solar. Wind farms are now producing 30 per cent of the global production of wind energy. India started looking into wind energy in the 1960s. It now accounts for up to 50 per cent of India’s renewables, with solar close behind. But India has still a lot to learn from China’s environmental initiatives and experiences, and this is one area of fruitful collaboration between the two global giants along with the aims of reducing extreme inequalities and degrading poverty. The project of reducing inequalities is closely intertwined with environmental protection because the worst sufferers of environmental degradation are the poor, especially those dependent on agriculture and forests or living in urban slums.The global environmental responsibilities of India and China have assumed greater significance because the USA, the other global economic power, is abandoning, under the Trump presidency, the climate change negotiation framework aimed at curbing global warmin


IAF choppers help douse forest fire in Pathankot

IAF choppers help douse forest fire in Pathankot

An IAF chopper engaged in firefighting operation in Pathankot.

Tribune News Service

Pathankot, May 28

A massive forest fire, which engulfed a 100-acre area at Karoli village near the Mamun Army Cantonment, was brought under control after a joint operation by the Pathankot district administration, Air Force and the Army.A thick blanket of smoke enveloped Pathankot city. Information about the fire was received by the Army on Sunday evening following which fire tenders and water tankers were pressed into service. In view of the intensity of the fire, the Army sought the help of the Deputy Commissioner.DC Neelima informed Divisional Forest Officer (DFO) Sanjeev Tiwari who rushed to the spot at Karoli village and engaged his men in dousing the flames. Hundreds of Army personal too joined the fire-fighting operation.However, an hour later the DFO sent an SOS to the DC, saying strong winds were making the situation difficult and cited some technical reasons and told the DC that the fire could be controlled only through an aerial fire-fighting exercise.The Deputy Commissioner called up the Chief Secretary, who then got in touch with the Air Chief Marshal. An hour later, a helicopter from the Udhampur airbase was sent.The chopper began the operation on Monday morning. Officials claimed that rice stubble burning in the area made things difficult for the chopper which was equipped with a water carrier.The DFO said there could have been several reasons for the forest fire.“Either it could be an accident or a handiwork of some miscreants. A major part of the affected area has been brought under control now,” the Divisional Forest Officer said.At the time of filing this report, operations were under way though officials maintained that a major part of the fire had been doused.


Army orders court of inquiry into Major Gogoi’s conduct Exemplary punishment if found guilty: Army chief

Army orders court of inquiry into Major Gogoi's conduct

Tribune News Service

New Delhi/Srinagar, May 25

The Indian Army ordered a court of enquiry on Friday into the conduct of Major Leetul Gogoi following the incident at a hotel in Dalgate Srinagar.  The major had booked a room for himself in the hotel where a woman was scheduled to come and meet him.

The woman has recorded a statement under Section 164 of the CrPC saying she knew Major Gogoi.Army Chief Bipin Rawat had earlier in the day said exemplary punishment would be given to Major Leetul Gogoi if he was found guilty of “any offence”.(Read: Hotel fracas: Girl states she met Major of her ‘own will’)

“If Major Gogoi has done something wrong then I can say that he will be given due punishment and the punishment will be such that it will set an example,” Gen Rawat told reporters in south Kashmir’s Anantnag district. He arrived on a two-day visit to Kashmir on Thursday to review the security situation.

On May 23, Gogoi was briefly detained by police in Srinagar after an altercation when he was allegedly trying to enter a hotel with an 18-year-old woman, according to a police official.“If any officer of the Indian Army is found guilty of any offence, we will take strictest possible action,” Rawat told reporters at Pahalgham while on a visit to the Army Goodwill School. “If Major Gogoi has done something wrong, I assure you that he will be awarded punishment at the earliest…the punishment will set an example,” the Army chief said.The Jammu and Kashmir Police has initiated an inquiry into the incident involving Gogoi, whose decision to tie a civilian to the bonnet of his vehicle in Kashmir last year sparked a row. — With PTI