Sanjha Morcha

27 YEARS ON: ARMY WELFARE HOUSING ORGANISATION FLATS WAITING REGISTRATION

      I thank U T Chandigarh Administration for providing land in Sector 47/C, Chandigarh and Army Welfare Housing Organisation (AWHO) for constructing 242 dwelling units for army personnel. I took over flat no 2513/A from AWHO on 02 Jul 91 vide AWHO letter no O/EA/50273/SS/Chandigarh/89 dated 12 Mar 91. In AWHO letter no O/EA/50273/SS/Chandigarh/89 dated 11 Dec 90 para 16, it was remarked that “AWHO will take action to transfer the dwelling units directly to individuals”. One of the prerequisites for registration of flat is possession of Occupation Certificate (OC).  Due to various factors issue of OC was delayed. 153 allottees that made no violations in their flats like me were issued Completion Certificate /OC only on 09 Dec 2016.

2.    Present status. Out of 242 allottees, 153 made no violation in their flats, a few modified their flats within the relaxation given by UT, Administration, Chandigarh and remaining altered beyond relaxation. Many allottees that made no violation in their flat (like me) are keen for registration of flats whereas those who made violations are not interested and a few are reluctant due to some other reasons.

3.    My submission is that those law abiding allottees who made no violation and are interested for registration should not suffer due to action of others. UT, Administration should register the flats on individual basis as they did for issue of Completion Certificate. UT, Administration and AWHO should work out the registration charges of flat applicable at the time of handing over the dwelling units in 1991 on individual basis.

4.   Win-Win Approach. Allottees will become legal owners of their flats by registration and UT, Administration will generate revenue.

5.      As a law-abiding citizen, I have been paying my income tax, electricity, water, telephone and AWH Cooperative & Maintenance Society Ltd bills regularly and on time. My wife and myself both being senior citizens are not left with much time to live, therefore we have registered ourselves with a local government hospital to donate our eyes and full body after our death.

6.      I am ready to speak to you on the subject on any day, anytime and anywhere as per your convenience.

7.        I am waiting to receive communication from you please.

                                                                                                                                                                                                                               Yours faithfully

                                                                                                                                                                IC-30666N     Brigadier P K Hoogan (Retired), ME, MIE

 


Now, a movie on Sepoy Harbhajan Singh

Now, a movie on Sepoy Harbhajan Singh

A TV grab of the short film, ‘Plus Minus’. Tribune Photo

Deepkamal Kaur

Tribune News Service

Jalandhar, October 4

 

Almost 12 years since the Indian Army stopped the tradition of ceremoniously bringing back the ‘soul’ of dead Sepoy Harbhajan Singh for a leave to his native Koke village in Kapurthala from near Doklam on the India-China border, where he was posted, a recent short film, ‘Plus Minus’, has again revived its memories.The film has been recently released by Delhi-based celebrated YouTuber and actor Bhuvan Bam on his channel BB Ki Vines. The co-star in the 18-minute film is popular actress Divya Dutta. The film has already touched 1.4 crore views in two weeks.

The Army followed the tradition of bringing back the uniform of the Sepoy for 38 years even after his death via Dibrugarh Express every year on September 13. Army men from his 23 Punjab Regiment used to be specially deployed for leaving his uniform and bringing it back to the regiment after a two-month leave. The jawans believed that even after his death, he continued to guide them in their dreams. Hence, they started worshipping him in a temple close to the Nathula Pass near Sikkim.The photo opportunity and an annual news feature which all local media used to carry earlier got stopped when the Army had to discontinue the practice. The tradition stopped following a petition filed by Subedar Piara Singh, an ex-serviceman from Raipur Rasulpur village near here.

As the film is now doing rounds on the social media, the petitioner is no more. His son Amrik Singh shared that his dad passed away about four years ago.

“Had he seen the film that propagates the superstition, he would have surely reacted strongly to it again. He fought against the disbelief that was being spread by the Army, which eventually had to do away with the practice after 2006,” he said.

Having retired in 1970 after serving the 1st Sikh Light Infantry Battalion, Subedar Piara Singh had moved a local court against the Defence Ministry and Commanding Officer of 23 Punjab, asking them to controvert on the matter and ensure that such “superstitions” were not advertised in the future.

He had contended that he read that Jawan Harbhajan Singh of 23 Punjab deployed on the Indo-China border died on duty on October 4, 1968, but

was still believed to be alive in the form of a

ghost and seeking all amenities of a living person, including pay and allowances, annual leave and promotions.

The ex-serviceman pointed out that such

stories leads to a conclusion that Army believes in “live martyr” Baba Harbhajan Singh. He also sought to know how an Honorary Subedar Major could be promoted as Honorary Captain.

The Commanding Officer of the Regiment had then replied, “The unit was deployed in Sikkim under 164 Mountain Brigade 27 Mountain Division from October 1967 to December 1970. He said Sepoy Harbhajan Singh was serving the unit during the period. On October 4, 1968, when he was on patrol, he slipped and fell in a fast-flowing stream. His body was washed away by the fast current along with weapon and found subsequently after a search. The Sepoy was unmarried.”

He was then 22. The CO had to clarify that the unit was not aware of granting any rank to the dead soldier or any financial assistance to the next of kin as it showed nowhere on records. Later, the practice got stopped.

1.4 crore views in two weeks 

The short film, ‘Plus Minus’, has been recently released by Delhi-based celebrated YouTuber and actor Bhuvan Bam on his channel BB Ki Vines. The co-star in the 18-minute film is popular actress Divya Dutta. The film has already touched 1.4 crore views in two weeks.

Jan Man: Siachen Special: Know all about OP Baba shrine where all soldiers offer prayers b

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Yet to ascertain if casualties in J&K due to sniper attack, says Army Chief Gen Bipin Rawat

Yet to ascertain if casualties in J&K due to sniper attack, says Army Chief Gen Bipin Rawat

NEW DELHI: Army Chief General Bipin Rawat on Monday admitted that there were some casualties in the security forces in Jammu and Kashmir recently but stopped short of confirming that they were allegedly caused by sniper attack by terrorists.

”We have had some casualties to our security personnel in J&K. Whether these have been done by alleged snipers or not, we are still studying, ”Army Chief General Bipin Rawat said in the national capital.

”We haven’t yet recovered a sniper weapon,”’he added.

he remarks from General Rawat came days after it was reported that three Army personnel were allegedly killed in sniper attack by terrorists in Jammu and Kashmir.

Sniper attack by Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM) terrorists has emerged as a new cause of concern for security agencies in Kashmir Valley after the killing of three personnel since mid-September.

The incident has prompted the law enforcement agencies to re-calibrate their strategy to thwart such strikes by the Pakistan-based terrorist group.

The first such attack took place at Newa in Pulwama on September 18 when a CRPF personnel was injured, according to news agency PTI.

Security officials thought it to be a one-off strike till the recent spate of sniper attacks that claimed the lives of a Sashastra Seema Bal jawan and an Army personnel in Tral, and a CISF jawan in Nowgam.

Based on intelligence inputs, security agencies believe that at least two separate ‘buddy’ groups of the proscribed JeM comprising two terrorists each have entered Kashmir Valley in early September and have entrenched themselves in South Kashmir’s Pulwama district with the help of some overground supporters of the outfit.

These terrorists, according to the officials, have been thoroughly trained by Pakistan’s external snooping agency ISI for carrying out sniper attacks in Kashmir Valley and have been armed with M-4 carbines, used by the US-led allied forces in Afghanistan.

There is a possibility that these weapons may be part of the arms and ammunition captured by the Taliban, with whom the JeM cadre was fighting the allied forces in Afghanistan, security officials said.

However, the officials said that the weapon was also being used by the special forces of the Pakistan Army.

In all the instances of sniper attacks, the terrorists used a nearby hillock to carry out strikes on a security force campus when unsuspecting jawans were using their mobile phones to talk to their family or friends.

The M-4 carbine is mounted with a telescope and the terrorists are using night vision devices to locate their potential targets, the officials said.

The weapon can fire at its target up to 500-600 metres with precision.

The security agencies, including the army, CRPF and Jammu and Kashmir police, have already issued fresh guidelines to their jawans and officers located in camps in the militancy-hit areas.

Maintaining a silence over the change in tactics, the officials said that more combing operations would be carried out around the security camps.

They said that Jaish cadres were likely to carry out more such attacks in the future, but added that some modules had been identified and these cases were likely to be cracked soon.

The security agencies had been observing that while pushing the terrorists into Kashmir Valley from the Line of Control (LoC), the ISI meticulously planned to send in Jaish-e-Mohammed cadre along.

Those terrorists were armed with the best possible arsenal including bullets with steel core with the capability to pierce a static bulletproof bunker used during counter-terrorism operations, the officials said.

The first such incident was noticed on the New Year eve when JeM terrorists had carried out a suicide attack on a CRPF camp in Lethpora in South Kashmir.

Five personnel of the para-military force were killed in the attack and one of them was hit by a bullet fatally despite using a static bullet-proof shield provided by the Army, officials said.

A thorough inquiry into the attack showed that the bullet fired by the terrorist from the assault AK rifle was of a steel core with the capability of piercing through the static bunkers used by security personnel during encounters with terrorists.

Generally, the AK bullets used in the armoury have a lead core covered with mild steel which cannot penetrate a bulletproof shield but after the December 31, 2017 encounter and subsequent findings, the rules of the proxy-war changed, the officials said.

A detailed analysis of the previous suicide attacks was carried out during which ballistic analysis of the terror attack on district police lines of Pulwama in South Kashmir in last August showed that ‘steel core’ bullets had been used by the terrorists in that encounter with security personnel. Eight security personnel had lost their lives in the terror strike.

The ammunition, according to the officials, is being modified from across the border with the help of Chinese technology of encasing the bullet with a hardened steel core.

All this comes at a time when India is trying hard to convince the United Nations for a ban on the JeM and designating its chief Maulana Masood Azhar as a global terrorist despite its efforts being blocked by China four times in past.

 


NSG’s military post vacant for 6 months, asks MHA to step in

New Delhi, October 28

India’s elite counter-terror force NSG has been functioning without a regular military operations commander for the past six months, posing serious questions on the effectiveness of its combat readiness and planning in case of an impending contingency.

The special force has recently asked the Ministry of Home Affairs, under which it functions, to intervene and get an officer from the Army on board soon.

The post of Inspector General (Operations) is held by a Major General-rank officer on deputation from the Army, which, sources said, has been vacant since April after incumbent Maj Gen Shashank Mishra moved to his cadre on promotion.

In the NSG hierarchy, the counter-terror and counter-hijack commando units are placed under the overall command of IG (Operations), a post based in the NSG headquarters in Delhi.

The NSG Director General (DG), an officer from the Indian Police Service, is the top commander of the force.

Sources said as no new Maj Gen rank-officer has been posted to the NSG till now, another IG of the force (IPS officer) is holding the post in an additional capacity.

They said the non-availability of suitable officers from the Army has been the primary reason that the post is vacant.

While some officers prefer getting promoted in their cadre, in some cases they were not found suitable for the working of the NSG, that remains in combat readiness round-the-clock, they said.

The IG Operations is brought from the military as both the fighting units of the NSG-51 Special Action Group and 52 SAG are manned by officers and jawans from the Special Forces and infantry of the Indian Army and it requires a special bonding and coordination between the two to ensure seamless, precise and successful operational results.

NSG DG Sudeep Lakhtakia said while it is important to have a full-time IG (Operations), he had “complete faith” in the capabilities of his Deputy IG (Operations) and Force Commander (a Brigadier-rank officer) in keeping 24×7 readiness of the commandos.

In 2012, a similar situation occurred for about six months when there was no regular operations head in the ‘black cat’ commandos force. — PTI


Martyrs’ kin threaten to sell awards if demands not met

Pradeep Sharma

Tribune News Service

Chandigarh, October 14

The kin of the martyrs, who made the supreme sacrifice in the service of the motherland, have threatened to sell the gallantry awards and medals to register their protest against the apathetic attitude of the central and state governments towards their long-pending demands.

“We have been waiting for the government’s response to our genuine demands for years without any success. Now, we will go on a relay fast and sell the gallantry awards and medals to register our protest against the apathetic attitude of the governments,” Vijay Kumar, president of the Shahidon ki Awaz Kalyan Sangh, an organisation spearheading the agitation of the martyrs’ kin, said.

Since the majority of martyrs belong to Rewari, Mahendragarh, Charkhi Dadri and Jhajjar districts, the relay fast would be started from one of the these places, said sangh general secretary Raghubir Sharan.

Demanding a compensation of Rs1 crore each from the Centre and the state governments, Vijay Kumar demanded a quota for the kin of the martyrs in the Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha.

More quota for the families of martyrs in educational institutions and jobs, jobs for the current generations of those who made the sacrifice in 1962, 1965 and 1971 wars and implementation of ‘one rank, one pension’ scheme.

Kumar set a deadline of November 1 for the authorities to accept their demands failing which they would be forced to launch an agitation.


Air Force To Discuss Training Plan For Rafale Jets, S-400 At Two-Day Meet

Air Force To Discuss Training Plan For Rafale Jets, S-400 At Two-Day Meet

Rafale deal has kicked up a political controversy lately. (Representational)

NEW DELHI: The Indian Air Force (IAF) brass at its two-day Commanders Conference that kicked off on Thursday is set to discuss the training plan for the new inductions in the force including the Rafale jets and S-400 Triumf missile system.

The IAF is set to get the S-400 Triumf missile system and the Chinook and Apache helicopters besides the Rafale fighter jets. The top officers of the IAF will discuss ways to “suitably refine the training pattern” in order to “maintain the edge over adversaries”.

Addressing the conference on Thursday, Air Force Chief BS Dhanoa emphasised the need for robust training of IAF personnel in order to maintain its operational competence.

He reiterated the need for holding an operational edge over adversaries through focused operational training.

Air Force Chief Dhanoa underlined the need for joint training with the Army and the Navy in order to “enhance the synergy between the services for ensuring national security”.

The conference was inaugurated by Minister of State for Defence Subhash Bhamre at the Air Force headquarters here.

Mr Bhamre commended the IAF for promoting indigenisation in multiple ways including the force’s decision to procure 18 squadrons of light combat aircraft (LCA) Tejas built by Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd (HAL).

“IAF leading the thrust to promote India’s indigenous bio-fuel for jets programme would surely go a long way in reducing India’s crude oil import bill by more than 10 per cent and augment farmers’ incomes substantially,” Bhamre noted.

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The Commanders will also interact with a team of senior officials from HAL and discuss issues pertaining to production, upgradation, indigenisation, design and development of various equipment and aircraft.


Lt Gen Paramjit is GOC of White Knight Corps

Lt Gen Paramjit is GOC of White Knight Corps

Lt Gen Paramjit Singh takes over charge of the White Knight Corps from Lt Gen Saranjeet Singh (right). Tribune Photo

Tribune News Service
Jammu, October 12

Lt Gen Paramjit Singh on Friday assumed charge of the White Knight Corps, also called the 16 Corps. He succeeded Lt Gen Saranjeet Singh.

Lt Gen Paramjit Singh, General Officer Commanding of the 16 Corps, was commissioned into the 2nd Battalion of the Madras Regiment in June 1982.

The Army officer converted to the Para Regiment in January 1984. He is an alumnus of Defence Services Staff College, Wellington, Army War College, Mhow, and National Defence College, New Delhi.Lt Gen Paramjit is acquainted with the terrain and existing operational dynamics of entire Jammu and Kashmir. He has commanded a Para Regiment during Operation Parakram, Siachen Brigade and the Vajra Division.

The 16 Corps GOC has held various operational and staff appointments in field formations in the Valley, which include the Colonel General Staff (Operations) of Vajra Division in Kupwara, Brigade General Staff (Operations) of the 15 Corps headquarters, Major General General Staff at the Northern Command headquarters. He has been an instructor at the Indian Military Academy, Dehradun, Army War College, Mhow, and at Army Training Team in Botswana. He has been the Commandant and Chief Instructor at Special Forces Training School, Nahan.The General Officer Commanding, before taking charge of the White Knight Corps, was the Chief of Staff, Northern Command headquarters.

Lt Gen Paramjit Singh has been decorated with Ati Vishisht Seva Medal and Sena Medal (Gallantry).

On assuming charge of the White Knight Corps, Lt Gen Paramjit Singh exhorted all ranks to continue working with the same zeal and enthusiasm and always be combat-ready to thwart the nefarious designs of the enemy and inimical forces.


Septuagenarian convict released

Septuagenarian convict released

Subheg Singh after his release from jail on Friday. Tribune photo

Tribune News Service

Amritsar, October 5

Subheg Singh (75), an ex-serviceman, was on Friday released from the Amritsar Central Jail two months before the full period of his sentence. He was sentenced to 12-year imprisonment in six different cases related to cheque bounce in May 2013. He was released from the jail to mark the Gandhi Jayanti celebrations.

Subheg Singh, a resident of Patti, said someone had filed cases of cheque bounce against him in a local court and he could not prove himself innocent. Therefore, he was sentenced to imprisonment. Singh said he lost his son during this period and now his daughter-in-law along with his two grandsons came to jail to meet him. He was finding it difficult to come to the terms as he was getting older.

Expressing happiness, he thanked the jail authorities for making efforts for his early release. He also paid tributes to Mahatma Gandhi before his release from the jail on Friday.