Sanjha Morcha

15K candidates to be screened at Army recruitment rally

Tribune News Service

Jalandhar December 2

An Army recruitment rally is being organised on the grounds of Army Public School (primary wing) from December 2 to 8 for the recruitment of soldier general duty, soldier technical, soldier clerk/store keeper technical/inventory management and sepoy pharma categories by the recruiting office (headquarters), Jalandhar Cantt, for candidates belonging to Jalandhar, Kapurthala, Hoshiarpur and SBS Nagar districts.

Addressing the media, Brig Jagdeep Dahiya, Deputy Director General, Recruitment (Punjab and J&K), said approximately 15,000 candidates would be screened. The screening process consists of initial verification of documents, physical fitness tests and physical measurements. Candidates who qualify, will undergo medical examination and eligible candidates would appear in the Common Entrance Examination (CEE), scheduled to be held on January 27 at the rally venue.

Candidates who come in merit in the CEE will be inducted into various arms and services of the Army.

Brig Jagdeep Dahiya thanked the Deputy Commissioner and the Police Commissioner for their support in security arrangements and crowd control. He expressed gratitude to the Local Army Formation and the civil administration for their support.


IAF Recruitment Alert 2019: Apply for Airmen in Group X & Y Trade

IAF to Recruit Airmen in Group X & Y Trade

IAF Job Update 2019: Indian Air Force (IAF) has invited applications for the post of Airmen in Group X & Y Trade Posts. Candidates who want to apply for the post need to visit the official site of at airmenselection.cdac.in to apply. The last date to apply for the post is till January 21, 2019. Candidates can also apply via careerindianairforce.cdac.in.

IAF Airmen Posts 2019 Important Dates

  • Opening Date of Application: January 02, 2019
  • Closing Date of Application: January 21, 2019
  • Online Exam Dates: March 14 to 17, 2019

 IAF Airmen Posts 2019 Eligibility Criteria

Educational Qualification

  • Group ‘X’ (Except Education Instructor Trade): Class 10th /matriculation passing certificate. Intermediate/10+2 or equivalent marksheet/marksheets (if applying on the basis of 12th/ intermediate or equivalent educational qualifications). 3 Years Engineering Diploma Final Year Marksheet (if applying on the basis of 3 Years Engineering Diploma from a Govt. recognised polytechnic in prescribed stream).
  • Group ‘Y’ {Except Automobile Technician, GTI, IAF (P), IAF(S) and Musician} Trades: Passed Intermediate / 10+2 / Equivalent Examination in any stream/subjects approved by Central / State Education Boards with minimum 50% marks in aggregate and 50% marks in English.
  • Group ‘Y’ Medical Assistant Trade Only: Passed 10+2/Intermediate/ equivalent exam with Physics, Chemistry, Biology and English with a minimum of 50% marks in aggregate and 50% marks in English.

Age Limit

Candidate born between 19 January 1999 and 01 January 2003 (both days inclusive) are eligible to apply.

Other Details

Candidates who want to apply for the post need to pay Rs 250/- as examination fee. Candidates will have to make the payment by using Debit Cards/Credit Cards/Internet Banking through payment gateway. For more details related to posts, candidates can check the detailed notification available here.


Pulwama civilian deaths result of free hand Satya Pal Malik gave forces in Kashmir; volatile situation may worsen

Kashmir is seething with anger. It is not that civilians have not been killed near encounter sites — six of them died when a shell exploded recently in Kulgam, but it is the impression that Jammu and Kashmir governor Satya Pal Malik is giving a free hand to the forces to deal with protesters that makes the situation explosive. An elected government in the civil secretariat led by a Kashmiri politician would not have made made any difference, but the very fact that a parcelled governor is running the state, makes the situation worrisome.

Since the day Malik assumed office in August, the casualty graph of militants, civilians and security forces alike has witnessed a sharp increase. In August alone, six civilians were killed; five in September; 14 in October; eight in November and seven till Saturday in December.

The difference between a combatant anThe blame for all these killings has been placed at the doorsteps of the armed forces.d a non-combatant has become blurred in Kashmir. Peoples Conference leader and the new face of Kashmir politics, Sajad Gani Lone, recently seemed to agree with this.

The state government, as it always does after every civilian killing, announced a “probe”. In making such an announcement, there is no difference, say, between Omar Abdullah, Mehbooba Mufti or Malik. They all announce it. But nothing happens later. The word “probe” is the most detested in the Kashmiri lexicon.

“We want to go and tell the army commander stationed in BB Cant (Badami Bagh Cantonment) to come and kill us all,” Chairman of JKLF, Mohammad Yasin Malik, said while talking to reporters in Srinagar on Monday.

 Yasin and his supporters, who were wearing white shrouds inscribed with the slogans like “Indian Army kill us all” were detained. His protest march was thwarted at Badami Bagh Cantonment. He fought with the police before he was whisked away in a jeep, three days after he was released from detention after spending a month in custody.

In Srinagar, the capital of Kashmir, the streets wore a deserted look in the aftermath of the killing of seven civilians in forces firing in south Kashmir’s Pulwama district on Saturday. Curbs were imposed almost everywhere, except north Kashmir’s Baramulla town. In view of apprehensions of a protest march, the police had sealed all the roads leading to Badami Bagh Cantonment, the main station of 15 Corps of the Indian Army in Srinagar.

“The international community should break its silence and stop the hands of India, which is behind killings in the Valley,” Yasin said. Normal life remained disrupted for the third consecutive day on Monday due to the shutdown, and curbs and suspensions of transport services. Internet services were disconnected and there was hardly anyone on the streets.

A fresh spell of grief has taken over Kashmir. The killings of militants will continue and this year is going to break all the record set by the forces in the past decade. With militants, security forces are also dying and so are the innocent civilians. But the civilian killings, no matter how far they are from the encounter site, inflict such a wound on the psyche of Kashmiris that it takes days before the situation gets “normal” again.

“We live in a perpetual state of mourning,” said Bashir Ahmad Bhat, “The mourning passes from one village to another, from one home to another. In the end, we all are dying.”

Bashir’s 14-year old son, Aqib, had left home on Saturday to participate in the protests to demand the bodies of three militants who were killed in the Pulwama encounter. He was shot in the head in army firing — one of the seven victims of Saturday’s bloodbath in south Kashmir.

That the governor has given a free hand to forces in recent months has created havoc in south Kashmir. After every kilometre, mobile phones of youngsters are scrutinised at security checkpoints for pictures of militants. There is a checkpoint on all major roads in towns of the Valley. The fear of the 1990s, when soldiers would appear in the dead of the night and drag residents out for search operations, has returned.

While the security forces are on the job to “end militancy”, it should not come at the cost of the civilian population’s dignity. “The highhandedness (of the forces) is a trigger for a youngster to take a violent path. If not stopped, these unfortunate (civilian) killings will continue and more symbols will get added to the cause,” Pervaiz Imroz, a human rights defender said in an interview.


Martyrs’ kin, war veterans honoured

Our Correspondent
Fazilka, December 16

An NGO, Shaheedon Ki Samadhi Committee, in association with the Army and the civil administration, organised a programme to honour war veterans and kin of martyrs at the Asafwala War Memorial on the eve of Vijay Diwas.

The memorial was raised for 206 jawans and JCOs who attained martyrdom during the 1971 Indo-Pakistan war in Fazilka sector. As many as 362 jawans were also injured in one of the fiercest battles fought in the history of India in this sector in 1971.


Record attrition in JK Clutching on to peace straws in an unending cycle of violence

Record attrition in JK

THE year is yet to end but the number of security personnel losing their lives this year in Kashmir has touched a decadal high. Another soldier joined this list in the encounter on Saturday that also extracted a horrendous toll of civilian lives. Is there any end to the interminable cycle of violence? India’s security managers draw solace from the record number of militants killed and the demolition of their infrastructure. There can be hardly any beef in eliminating forces that are perpetuating a climate of fear and unsettledness with little desire to bring about normalcy.

But the story in the Valley is not just about terrorism. There is a large population that is sullen over New Delhi’s blindsiding of the human and political aspects of the problem. Last month’s Kashmir visit by a former Norwegian PM Kjell Magne Bondevik has come as a sliver of hope. It is no secret that South Block invariably vets such sensitive missions and it is significant that the last foreign dignitary to visit the Valley was almost five years back. The Norwegians do not dabble in peace efforts unless invited by all the parties, even though their past record has not exactly been a roaring success. The Centre’s concurrence to the visit marks a turnaround in its unyielding stand of blackballing anyone who sought to interact with the Hurriyat leaders.

The elephant in the room will be Pakistan, especially after Bondevik ruled out a solution without talks involving all the sides. India had walked into a diplomatic cul de sac when it refused to talk to Pakistan till terrorism continued in the Valley. The breakthrough on the Kartarpur corridor suggests a certain dilution of that position, especially after Central ministers attended the inauguration ceremony in Pakistan. Kashmir needs to go through a cycle of talks and elections to extract itself from the black hole of endless violence. The Norwegian and the Kartarpur initiatives are some straws in the wind that need to be explored.


Clerical blunder deprived PoW’s kin of 13 acres ::::Lt Fauja Singh’s

Clerical blunder deprived PoW’s kin of 13 acres

A citation in appreciation of Lt Fauja Singh’s service, signed by Britain’s then Secretary of State for War PJ Grigg. Tribune Photo

Vikramdeep Johal

Tribune News Service

Chandigarh, December 13

A clerical blunder committed way back in 1950 has kept a World War-II martyr’s family deprived of over 13 acres of allotted land.

Lt Fauja Singh, a resident of Nago Ki Sarli village, Lyallpur district (Faisalabad), served in the Prince Albert Victor’s Own Cavalry of the Indian Armoured Corps. He died in a Japanese Prisoner of War (PoW) camp in May 1944. His family, which migrated to Amritsar district in 1947, got the tragic news from his unit’s Central Record Office at Jhansi (Madhya Pradesh).

On January 26, 1950 — the day India became a republic — a military newspaper, Jawan, published a list of “Fauji Singh” villages along with details of the land allottees and the respective sites. Lt Fauja Singh’s widow Harnam Kaur was allotted 13.25 acres at Khabba Dogran village near Tarn Taran.

However, when she and her family approached the Director General (Rehabilitation, Rural), Jalandhar, in 1950, they were told that their allotment had been withdrawn. They found out that the revenue officer concerned had mistakenly given the piece of land to another Harnam Kaur (wife of Tara Singh), who also belonged to Nago Ki Sarli village but was not eligible for the benefit in the war widow category.

The rehabilitation officer at Tarn Taran detected the error, following which the Director General’s office in Jalandhar cancelled the wrong allotment. However, the PoW case got stuck in red tape and no site was earmarked for his family.

Left in the lurch by the authorities, Lt Fauja Singh’s poverty-stricken widow Harnam Kaur put up at her brother’s house at Wazir Bhullar village in Amritsar district. The martyr’s son, Ajit Singh, died in 1971, while Harnam Kaur passed away in 1980.

Lt Fauja Singh’s grandson Ravinder Pal Singh says the family has been running from pillar to post for the past four decades, but to no avail. In 2000, he got to know from news reports that Britain was paying 10,000 pounds (about Rs 9 lakh, at today’s rates) each to the families of WW-II soldiers who had survived or died in Japanese PoW camps.

He approached his grandfather’s Jhansi-based unit, which wrote to the Army Headquarters in New Delhi in 2001 that Lt Fauja Singh’s name be included in the list of beneficiaries for the compensation. “We have got no response so far regarding our land allotment and monetary relief cases,” laments Ravinder Pal, who works for the Health Department in Amritsar.

 


MILITARY LITERATURE FESTIVAL The world & words of warriors

The world & words of warriors

Feathers. Isn’t it interesting that we see them in both — arrows and pens, arguably the first two long-range weapons that extended the range of the individual who wielded them?

Roopinder Singh

Feathers. Isn’t it interesting that we see them in both — arrows and pens, arguably the first two long-range weapons that extended the range of the individual who wielded them?

While it took three or more vanes or feathers to make the fletching that gave stability to the arrow, just one feather made a quill and enabled the mind to focus on thoughts enough to express them with the expectation of a degree of longevity.

For as long as there have been wars, there have been discussions/debates/disputes about them — accounts of soldiers who fought, officers who led them, the victors and the vanquished, all make for a colourful spectrum of literature that has a definite niche of its own, even as it feeds the need among a broader audience to know more about that ultimate engagement that too often results in death and destruction.

While the debate about whether war is fundamental to human nature or a product of circumstances is an old and unresolved one, however, the actions of individuals faced with life and death situations that take them far beyond what they have experienced so far can be fascinating. Polemology or the study of war is an ancient and honoured pursuit.

India has a long tradition of war literature. Parts of the Vedas, the Puranas, the Ramayana, the Mahabharata, the Bhagavad Gita and the Arthshastra refer to war, its physical and moral dimensions, and weapons.

Many folk songs feature the distress of the damsel whose husband or loved one has gone into battle. Prithviraj Raso, an epic poem written by Chand Bardai (1149 – c. 1200), is considered to be of the first works in the history of Hindi literature which has accounts of war. Ramdhari Singh Dinkar and Subhadra Kumari Chauhan have written some of the epic Veer Ras poems.

The havoc caused, especially in Punjab, by the eager Indian princes drafting able-bodied men for World War I led to empty homes and literature of longing, expressed in folk songs, poems and prose in Punjabi and Urdu.

There have been other accounts and serious studies of war in various languages, including in English, which are more widely seen, discussed and feted than those in regional languages.

Chandigarh has one of the largest concentration of veterans in India, and it is only fitting that it has become the venue of the Military Literature Festival. Preceded by the carnival that served a broader audience, the festival has an impressive line-up of speakers and will thus become the focal point of much discussion during and after the sessions.

The disciplined and distant world of the armed forces becomes intelligible through interaction with soldier-scholars. Indeed, the felicity with which some of them wield the pen may come as a bit of a surprise for those who have not previously interacted with them.

The mass movement of soldiers to faraway lands had to impact them in various ways. The exposure showed the Indian soldier that he was not inferior to any, in fact, often he vanquished his counterparts. No doubt, they were part of the British Indian army which served the British Empire, but they had their own minds, and once they left the Indian shores, many spread out. Indeed, 90 per cent of the members of the Ghadar Party, established in 1913 to overthrow the “English Raj”, were Sikhs from Punjab — half of them Army veterans.

Indian soldiers returned from wars, including the World Wars with battle scars and bright ideas that illuminated their quest for freedom against the colonial yoke. As they served their motherland, they gained more, and thus have more to share with us and teach us.

 


Extension of retirement age of Colonels of the Indian Army, at par with that of Gp Captain

I wish to inform you that recently the *ARMED FORCES TRIBUNAL, Principal Bench at New Delhi has rendered a favourable judgment in the matter of extension of retirement age of Colonels of the Indian Army, at par with that of Gp Captain and Captains of the other two sister services.* My plea was to enhance the retirement age of Colonels from 54 to 57 years. I was the first person to file this matter in the AFT way back in 2015 just prior to my retirement (case No 599/2015). Other officers filed similar cases subsequently.
A copy of the judgment has just now been made available on the website and I have gone through the entire contents of the said judgment. Judges have passed a very strong and favourable judgment, directing Govt of India to consider the case of the applicants and formulate a policy which shall set right the anomaly. The judgment can be accessed here.
http://aftdelhi.nic.in/index.php?option=com_casetracking&view=judgement&layout=pdfdetail&did=11330&Itemid=5 .
The judgment also grants consequential benefits to the applicants (alone). In simple terms, it means that post formulation and implementation of the revised policy relating to superannuation ages of Cols, the Cols who were applicants in this case will be given continuity in service, seniority and all pay and allowances as admissible.
Now, those who have retired in the last few years and those who are at the brink of retiring, should also be made aware so that the benefits flowing out of the above judgment can be availed by all. To avail the benefits of extension of retirement age, and the consequential benefits viz. continuity in service, pay and allowances, seniority, and refixation of pension in case of already retired officers, they should also approach the AFT, New Delhi by filing their respective cases seeking same relief as had been asked by the original batch of applicants who now stand vindicated and are bound to get their rightful due from the MoD very soon. It is important that this exercise be completed ASAP preferably within the next few weeks as delay will only weaken and hamper your chances of getting same relief and benefits from the AFT. Interested officers may contact my lawyer Shri Harshvardhan at +91- 9140870945.
OA 741-2015
Regards,
*Col Nisheeth Singhal Retd*
*+91-7045533967*
*nisheeth5p@yahoo.com*

Ex-serviceman loses Rs 59K to fraudsters

Tribune News Service
Panchkula, December 2

A 75-year-old retired Army man and resident of Sector 8 here has been duped of Rs 59,510 by four persons, including a woman, on the pretext of getting insured amount of Rs 6 lakh released under the Army Group Insurance Fund for which he had been paying premiums regularly.

In his complaint to the police, the victim, Major Janak Raj (retd), said after attaining the age of 75 he was entitled for the release of Army Group Insurance Fund amounting to be around Rs 6 lakh.

The victim said some persons contacted him on his mobile phone claiming that they were employees/agents from the Army Group Insurance Fund’s office and they assist Army personnel in obtaining their matured amount.

He said the caller told him that the amount would be credited to his account after the completion of some formalities and he had to pay certain amount in advance before the release of the Group insurance Fund.

He said the four suspects, who identified themselves as Saxena, Rajit, Viraj Ranawat and Neha Aggarwal, called him on different dates from their mobile phones and asked him to transfer Rs 5,232, Rs 13,970, Rs 23,918 and Rs 16,390, respectively.

Major Janak Raj (retd) said he deposited the above mentioned amounts in the bank accounts provided by them through RTGS and cheques. He said all payments were made in August and September this year.

He said as no amount was credited to his account after waiting for several days, he contacted the Army Group Insurance Fund office in Delhi to know as to why he was not getting the amount.

The victim said he was informed that they had neither asked to make any payment in advance nor they had authorised anyone to make such calls to retired officers.

He said the officials also told him that some persons had stolen bio-data of several officers and they were cheating and committing fraud with the retirees of the Army.

The Sector 5 police station has registered a case against unidentified persons under Sections 406 and 420 of the IPC and further investigations were on in the case.

Suspects contacted victim on his phone

The victim said some persons contacted him on his mobile phone claiming that they were employees/agents from the Army Group Insurance Fund’s office and they assist Army personnel in obtaining their matured amount. He said the caller told him that the amount would be credited to his account after the completion of some formalities and he had to pay certain amount in advance before the release of the Group insurance Fund.


Govt allows agencies to monitor computers, sparks privacy fears

opppn slams Centre; provision was laid down by UPA govt, says Jaitley
NEW DELHI: The government and the Opposition on Friday sparred over a notification allowing 10 central agencies, including the Delhi police, rights to snoop into anyone’s computer, with Congress president Rahul Gandhi raising the spectre of a “police state” and finance minister Arun Jaitley and IT minister Ravi Shankar Prasad clarifying that this was merely a repetition of rules passed during the Congress-led United Progressive Alliance (UPA) regime in 2009.

Jaitley maintained in the Rajya Sabha that “authorised agencies have right under the law to intercept any attempt to subvert national security, defence, public order or integrity of India”, even as Congress president Rahul Gandhi seized the opportunity to target Prime Minister Narendra Modi in his tweet that said, “Converting India into a police state isn’t going to solve your problems, Modi Ji. It’s only going to prove to over 1 billion Indians what an insecure dictator you really are.”

On Thursday, Union home secretary Rajiv Gauba issued a statutory order authorising 10 “security and intelligence” agencies to lawfully “intercept, monitor and decrypt” information through a “computer resource”. It became the latest bone of contention between the Opposition and the government.

BJP chief Amit Shah hit back at Gandhi. “Yet again, Rahul does fear-mongering and plays politics with national security. UPA put no barriers on surveillance. When Modi govt puts safeguards for citizens, Rahul cries conspiracy,” he tweeted.