Sanjha Morcha

Troops’ retirement age Optimising service, reducing pension bill the way forward

Troops’ retirement age

Pensions account for about 30 per cent of India’s defence budget. A proposal to raise the retirement age of troops of the three armed forces is aimed not only at reducing the burgeoning post-retiral bill, but also to ensure that trained manpower stays in service for a much longer duration. The move, which could benefit about 15 lakh personnel, makes sense in both military and economic terms. The Chief of Defence Staff (CDS), General Bipin Rawat, has rightly argued in favour of getting a jawan to serve for 30 years rather than only 15-17 years. In February, General Rawat had dubbed the rise in the budget outlay for pensions of armed forces personnel as ‘unsustainable’ and stated that the three services were exploring the feasibility of extending the retirement age of jawans till 58 years. The whole idea is to pay pension for about two decades instead of the current 30-32 years. For the record, the pension budget for 2020-21 is

Rs 1.33 lakh crore, up from Rs 1.1 lakh crore in 2019-20.

As per another proposal, the Army is considering the ‘Tour of Duty’ (ToD) model to take in officers for only three years of service. With at least 90 per cent of the officers opting for permanent commission after doing 14 years’ service, the Short Service Commission (SSC) scheme’s purpose of keeping the Army lean is getting defeated. The cost incurred on an SSC officer — right from pre-commission training to the payment of gratuity — is as high as Rs 5-7 crore.

Unlike Israel’s mandatory conscription model, which dates back to 1948, ToD would be voluntary. Fighting-fit Israelis have been making the most of military service, lasting about three years, to subsequently excel in other professions. It’s a moot point to what extent unemployment and a ‘resurgence of nationalism and patriotism’, as cited by the Indian Army, can spur the youth to have a feel of military professionalism and then move on. Again, the focus is largely on reducing the payouts. The intended reforms would be worthwhile if they result in considerable savings that can facilitate much-needed modernisation of the forces.


Pakistani Army shells forward areas along LoC in Poonch district Pakistan last violated the ceasefire in Degwar sector on May 9

Pakistani Army shells forward areas along LoC in Poonch district

Jammu, May 17

The Pakistani Army on Sunday opened fire and shelled forward areas along the Line of Control (LoC) in Poonch district of Jammu and Kashmir, a defence spokesman said.

The cross-border firing started in Degwar sector around 8:40 am, drawing retaliation from the Indian Army, the spokesman said.

He said there was no report of any casualty on the Indian side in the Pakistani firing.

“They started with small arms firing and later fired mortars around 9:30 am,” the spokesman said, adding the cross-border firing between the two sides was going on when last reports came in.

The Pakistani firing ended over a week-long lull along the LoC.

Pakistan last violated the ceasefire in Degwar sector on May 9 and Kirni, Qasba and Shahpur sectors of Poonch two days earlier. PTI


CRPF orders immediate withdrawal of orderlies from retired brass in wake of COVID-19 Over 400 orderlies, cooks of CAPFs are deputed with retired, repatriated officials

CRPF orders immediate withdrawal of orderlies from retired brass in wake of COVID-19

New Delhi, May 16

The CRPF had ordered an immediate withdrawal of scores of its personnel working as domestic help and orderlies with its retired or repatriated officials fearing they might contract COVID-19 in the absence of proper healthcare facilities, officials said on Saturday.

The step had been taken in the country’s largest paramilitary force, they said, after reports emerged recently that four jawans posted with a retired Additional Director General-rank officer of another paramilitary force had been infected with COVID-19.

The force has directed its northern sector based in Delhi to “immediately withdraw” all orderlies, security personnel, drivers and cooks provided from its regular strength of 3.25 lakh personnel.

It has also begun a manpower audit to ascertain the number of men used for extending such privileges, the duration of these attachments and the order under which these postings were authorised.

“After a full manpower audit post May 17, only the most essential ones will be allowed to continue once the COVID-19 infection is contained. Action will be taken against unauthorised approvals and the names of officials enjoying these perks illegally will be notified to the Home Ministry,” a top officer, who requested anonymity, said.

The official said other Central paramilitary forces such as the Border Security Force, the Indo-Tibetan Border Police, the Central Industrial Security Force and the Sashastra Seema Bal were expected to issue such directions soon.

They said the withdrawal of personnel would also help the force to supplement its already depleted manpower as over 300 personnel from the CRPF units, based in the national capital, had either been infected by the pandemic, quarantined or were on leave.

Also, they said, that withdrawal of this jawan-rank personnel was also to make sure that they did not get infected with COVID-19 as they might not be able to take proper care of their health while rendering these duties.

Recently, another paramilitary force had admitted four such staffers and a state police personnel to an isolation facility at its camp in Chhawla in south-west Delhi.

This five personnel were posted at the residence of a senior officer in Delhi since he retired from service in February.

“We do not want a repeat of such an incident. These personnel working as domestic help and orderlies are as vulnerable to the COVID-19 disease as anyone else,” a top paramilitary officer said.

A back-of-the-envelope estimate by senior officials of these forces has found that over 100 vehicles and more than 400 orderlies and cooks of these Central Armed Police Forces (CAPFs) are deputed with various ranks of retired and repatriated officials across the country for varied periods of time.

The unofficial estimate put the expenditure of extending these perks at a few lakh rupees every year.

The Union Home Ministry had taken note of this abuse of manpower in 2016 and had said such practices ‘create a wrong impression in the public mind and are also against the basic decorum and discipline of the government service, more so of the uniformed forces.”

A directive issued on September 21, 2016, on the subject of ‘retention of manpower, vehicle etc by police officers at their residence even after their retirement’ had asked Central and state governments that such facilities should be withdrawn “within a period of one month of the retirement of any police official.”

It had said those retired police officials, who did not follow these instructions and enjoy these services by regular paramilitary personnel, “should be made to pay”.

“Similarly, action should be taken against the serving officials who do not take timely action to withdraw these privileges from the retired officials,” the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) order had said seeking its strict compliance. PTI


India opens up defence manufacturing; foreign firms can hold 74 pc stake Up from existing 49 per cent

India opens up defence manufacturing; foreign firms can hold 74 pc stake

Ajay Banerjee

Tribune News Service

New Delhi, May 16

Ending years of debate on the matter, the government on Saturday, in a path-breaking move, allowed foreign military equipment makers to invest up to 74 per cent stake, up from the existing 49 per cent, in projects in India.

The move comes, as the existing Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) limits for defence manufacturing sector meant it was literally a non-starter. India attracted only a measly $ 8.8 Million (Rs 66 crore) in FDI in the defence manufacturing sector in the past 19 years – that is from April 2000 to end of 2019. The figures were tabled in Lok Sabha on March 4 this year.

Otherwise, annual cumulative FDI inflow into India was some $ 62 billion for the fiscal ending March 31, 2019, which had raised demands for hiking the FDI limits in defence manufacturing.

Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman (who was Defence Minister from September 3, 2017, to May 31, 2019), announced the change that could encourage global biggies like Boeing, Lockheed Martin, Airbus, Saab, to invest in India. This will also be a boon for warship making industry, UAVs, Artificial intelligence, helicopters, military vehicles, aerospace ventures making sub-assemblies and part of aviation systems.

“FDI limit in the defence manufacturing under automatic route will be raised from 49% to 74%,” Sitharaman announced.

Also read Militay experts welcome reform measures in defence sector

Earlier, in August 2014, within three months of coming to power, the Narendra Modi government had raised the FDI cap in the sector from 26 per cent to 49 per cent.

Foreign equipment makers have said it openly at various forums that they would invest only once ‘controlling stake’ in a venture is assured, 49 per cent stake did not allow that.

Sitharaman also said a list of weapons and platforms will be drafted on which there will be a ban on the import, bans will be year-wise progressive timelines.

Indigenisation of imported spares is another issue that the Minister addressed. The problem is largely from Russian-origin spares.

Separate budget provisioning will be made for domestic capital procurement – weapons and equipment, this will help reduce the import bill.

The Ordnance Factory Board, which 41 factories under the MoD will be corporatised.

A Project Management Unit (PMU) will be set up to support contract management, besides the realistic setting of General Staff Qualitative Requirements (GSQRs) of weapons/platforms. GSQR’s are the parameters for choosing a weapon or platform.


Over 580 Indian evacuees from Maldives arrive in Kochi by naval ship Another Navy Ship INS Magar had evacuated 202 Indian citizens from Maldives

Over 580 Indian evacuees from Maldives arrive in Kochi by naval ship

Indian Naval Ship Jalashwa cast off for Kochi carrying 588 stranded Indian nationals after completing the embarkation, as part of Operation Samudra Setu under the governments Vande Bharat mission, at Male in Maldives. — PTI

Kochi, May 17

More than 580 Indian citizens stranded in Maldives due to the COVID-19 pandemic arrived here onboard a Naval ship on Sunday, in the second phase of the Vande Bharat repatriation mission, officials said.

The Indian Navy ship INS Jalashwa under “Operation Samudra Setu” with 588 evacuees from Maldives arrived at the Cochin Port at 11.30 am on Sunday, official sources said.

The Cochin Port Trust tweeted a photo of the third group of Indian expatriates evacuated from the Island nation arriving at the port.

There are 568 repatriates of Kerala, 15 of Tamil Nadu and three belonging to Telangana and two persons from Lakshadweep, officials said.

This is the third naval ship operated as part of the Vande Bharat mission to the city.

On May 10, the vessel had brought home 698 Indian nationals from Maldives.

Two days later, another Navy Ship INS Magar had evacuated 202 Indian citizens from Maldives to here.

As Jalashwa carrying 588 evacuees left Maldives on Saturday morning, the High Commission of India there expressed its gratitude to the government of the island nation for ensuring safe repatriation of stranded Indian citizens.

“We are extremely grateful to the Govt.of #Maldives and all concerned agencies in ensuring safe and secure repatriation of nearly 1,500 Indian nationals from the Maldives under Op.

#SamudraSetu,” it had tweeted. PTI 


Army to outsource tank repairs to private parties

Army to outsource tank repairs to private parties

Ajay Banerjee
Tribune News Service
New Delhi, May 16

Indian Army is set to outsource repair and maintenance of its Russian-origin tank fleet of T-72 and T-90 tanks to private companies.

Bids have been invited from private vendors by asking the how they would undertake operations of Delhi-based 505 Army Base Workshop (ABW). The Army has used what they call “Government Owned Corporate Operated” (GOCO) model to describe this. Under provisions of GOCO, mooted in 2017, infrastructure and facilities of ABWs will remain under the ownership of the government while the contractors will be responsible for the day-to-day operations, plant maintenance and meeting targets.

India operates some 3,600 tanks of these two types, including some 1200 T-90 tanks and 2,400 T-72 tanks.

This is part of the government’s plan to rationalise Army manpower and reduce the “tail” as recommended by the Lt Gen DB Shekatkar committee in 2016. A Committee of Experts (CoE) under the Chairmanship of Lt Gen DB Shekatkar (Retd), was constituted in 2016 recommended outsourcing the functioning of the ABWs to private sector players.

The first stage of the bid called the Request for Information (RFI) has been sent out.

The Ministry of Defence (MoD) has barred its own Public Sector Undertakings (PSU) and also the Ordnance Factories from bidding.

The 505 Army Base Workshop has carried out repairs of tanks as well as engines and major/minor assemblies of tanks.  It currently overhauls 70 of the T-72 tanks annually and its associated engine, assemblies.

From this financial year, the 505 ABW is scheduled to start all these activities for T90 tanks.

Eight Army Base Workshops were established by the British during the Second World War (1939-1945) to carry out repairs and overhaul of weapons, vehicles and equipment to keep the Indian Army operationally ready.


Military experts welcome reform measures in defence sector Say announcement will help India realise its goal of achieving defence exports worth $5 billion

Military experts welcome reform measures in defence sector

New Delhi, May 16

Military experts, on Saturday, welcomed the reform measures rolled out by Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman to promote the domestic defence industry, saying their proper implementation will help India significantly cut its ballooning import bill on weapons and military platforms.

At a press conference, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman announced a series of initiatives to promote indigenous defence production which included making separate budgetary outlay to procure Indian-made military hardware, increasing FDI limit from 49 per cent to 74 per cent under the automatic route and generating a year-wise negative list of weapons whose import won’t be allowed.

Experts said increasing the existing Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) cap to 74 per cent would encourage global players such as Lockheed Martin, Boeing, Airbus and Dassault Aviation to set up manufacturing hubs in India and bring niche technology without hesitation as the firms will have majority stakes in their Indian subsidiaries.

India is one of the most lucrative markets for global defence giants as it figured among top three importers of military hardware in the world for the last eight years. According to estimates, the Indian armed forces are projected to spend around $130 billion in capital procurement in the next five years.

“Nobody is going to give us critical technology unless we provide them facilities to produce for the global market,” former Army Chief Gen (retd) N C Vij said while welcoming the government’s reform initiatives in the defence sector.

He said India must aim to become self-reliant in defence manufacturing as it would be difficult for the country to keep allocating scarce resources to import expensive weapons and platforms to confront complex security challenges along the northern and western borders.

“The kind of money we require to beat the security challenges is so much. We cannot afford to make that kind of an allocation year-after-year. There is a need for us be self-reliant in defence production, particularly when our economy was hit hard following the COVID-19,” he said.

Lt Gen (retd) Subrata Saha, former Deputy Chief of Army Staff, identified the proposed ban on imports of certain weapons and platforms as the most significant announcement by Sitharaman.

“In the process, the government is giving fixed timelines for indigenous production of specific weapons and platforms. It will make sure that there is accountability,” he said.

Former Chief of Air Staff Air Chief Marshal (retd) Fali Major praised the government’s announcement on corporatisation of the Ordnance Factory Board, the nearly 200-year-old organisation that operates 41 ammunition production facilities across the country.

“I welcome the reform initiatives. Raising of the FDI limit will give major impetus to defence production in India,” he said.

Lt Gen Saha also lauded the announcement by Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman that separate allocation in the budget would be made to procure India-made military hardware besides the proposed setting up of project management teams to oversee implementation of specific programmes.

Another defence expert, Lt Gen S L Narasimhan said the reform measures were in the offing for quite some time and that they would give a major push to the Make in India initiative in the defence sector.

Gen Vij felt Finance Minister’s announcement would help India realise its goal of achieving defence exports worth $5 billion in next five years.

“The reform measures are very timely and they will significantly boost our defence industry,” the former Army Chief said.

In February, Prime Minister Narendra Modi set a target of $5 billion worth of military exports in the next five years and invited global defence majors to set up manufacturing hubs in the country.

In her announcement, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman also said the process for the General Staff Qualitative Requirements (GSQRs) would be made realistic. In the GSQRs, the armed forces define criteria to procure platforms and hardware.

India was among the world’s three top importers of military hardware.

According to a latest report by the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI), a leading think-tank on military spending, India’s defence expenditure stood at USD 71.1 billion in 2019, which is the third highest after the US and China.

In 2017, the government came up with an ambitious policy under which select private firms were to be roped in to build key military platforms like submarines and fighter jets in India in partnership with global defence majors. PTI


UK’s 100-yr-old COVID-19 fundraising war veteran dreams of revisiting India Captain Tom Moore served in India during World War II

UK's 100-yr-old COVID-19 fundraising war veteran dreams of revisiting India

Captain Tom Moore received 1,50,000 birthday cards as well as a Royal Air Force fly-past on his 100th birthday on April 30. Twitter

London, May 16

A 100-year-old Army veteran Captain Tom Moore, who served in India during the World War II and became an Internet sensation with his coronavirus fundraising drive to raise millions by doing laps around his garden, says revisiting India is among his few post-lockdown wishes.

In an interview with ‘The Times’, the military man who served as an engineer during the war in India expressed a wish to be able to travel once again after the coronavirus travel restrictions are eased.

“I would like to go back to India again and Barbados I think, and maybe the Continent,” said Moore, who celebrated his 100th birthday last month.

“Being realistic I don’t think I will get to all the places. But I would love to travel on Route 66 in America,” he said.

Conscripted to the 8th Battalion of the Duke of Wellington’s Regiment in 1940, Moore served in India and Burma and then instructed at the Armoured Fighting Vehicle School. After the war, he became a managing director of a concrete company.

He has successfully raised almost 33 million pounds for NHS Charities Together and was promoted to Honorary Colonel of the Army Foundation College, awarded Freedom of the City of London and became the oldest person ever to achieve a UK No. 1 single.

“I never anticipated I would ever be a celebrity, I didn’t really understand what they were,” he told the newspaper in a virtual interview over Zoom.

“I don’t really understand how it all happened, except I’m seen as being a hopeful person and it’s true I’ve never despaired, even in wartime, I’ve always known that things would get better. Just like now, we are going through a dark patch but things will improve,” he said.

Moore received a whopping 150,000 birthday cards on April 30 as well as a Royal Air Force fly-past and is a sought-after personality after he completed his mission of 100 laps around his garden to mark his centenary year and help the National Health Service (NHS) frontline professionals fighting the deadly virus.

“The fly-past was wonderful. They were flying past in peace, not anger and it was in my benefit, I couldn’t believe it,” said Moore.

“I also loved my card from the Queen. She is a marvellous person. I remember when she and I were in the Army together, and although she was quite a lot younger than me she was in the same uniform. That felt very uniting,” he said.

The war veteran refuses to slow down and is now fundraising for a new set of charities. He has set up a foundation and a website called captaintom.org to raise money to combat issues such as loneliness and help fund more hospices. He also has his own Twitter account and a publishing contract to write two books. PTI


Life lessons from pandemic What the Sikhs have shown is that they follow their religion in their life in a way that no other community has done. They have learnt well the lessons their Gurus taught them

Life lessons from pandemic

Ira Pande

Queen Elizabeth famously described 1992 as her ‘annus horribilis’, which is Latin for a horrible year. Some cruel Republican wags called it ‘Her Majesty’s bum year’, because in that one year, she saw the marriage of her first-born son and heir to the British throne, Prince Charles, to the beautiful Princess Diana break up, leading to a huge dip in popularity ratings for the royal family. As if this weren’t enough, a devastating fire gutted the historic Windsor Castle, among her most favourite properties and a national treasure. Few will forget the grim Queen, her head covered by a scarf, gazing sadly at the debris of the monument that seemed to reflect her own life at that moment.

Perhaps we can also begin to think of dubbing 2020 as a collective ‘annus horribilis’ for all of us on this planet. No one in this generation remembers another one like it, as grim data is reeled out daily about the mounting deaths and the end of the world as we knew it until a few months ago. Enough has been written about the plight of the unemployed and the poor, so none of us will ever be able to forget the heart-rending sight of long lines of migrants, trudging on highways and sleeping on railway tracks with their little children and pitiful belongings. Nor will we ever forget the ugliness of those who have shown such indifference and callousness to fellow humans wherever in the world they may be. For those of us born after the Partition, it is like a re-run. I doubt if anyone will forget this year that has brought so much misery to so many.

Yet, we cannot also forget how miraculously the planet healed itself as human beings stopped all those activities that have destroyed the harmony of nature. The sight of the magnificent Dhauladhar range, visible after decades from Jalandhar, the pristine blue waters of the Ganga, cleansed of its pollutant industrial and human waste, the heart-warming sight of animals reclaiming their lost world, snatched away by ruthless development — all these and more are equally worth remembering. It now remains to be seen which world we will choose to occupy and build when this scourge is finally over and we can resume our broken lives. If the unruly and jostling mobs outside our thekas were anything to go by, I suspect we will slip back to the life that we should seriously give up. I am an eternal optimist but sometimes even I begin to wonder whether we will really learn some lessons from this pandemic.

If it were up to me, I would declare a worldwide lockdown once a year for a month so that the planet can heal itself. It took Nature just a month to regain its equipoise, how long will it take us? Sometimes when human greed crosses the boundaries of good behaviour, Nature takes over to show them who really owns the planet and what will live on long after you and I are gone.

This may sound like pop-philosophy, but reflect for a moment on how many dear friends and relatives we have seen die and been helpless as we couldn’t attend their last rites. How many homeless people have lost not just their livelihoods but even the will to live — and you will agree that it is time for politicians everywhere to stop throwing blame and playing politics even on an occasion as this. It sickens me when I hear and see them exchange insults or shed crocodile tears over the plight of migrants without lifting a finger to help in any meaningful way. Is this responsible behaviour and do they even deserve to be called our representatives? I have written countless columns but the warmth that my piece on the Sikh community received has taken me by surprise. So many friends, non-Sikhs, mind you, have said they heartily agree. What the Sikhs have shown all armchair philosophers and our lofty academics is simply that they follow their religion in their life in a way that no other community has done. And even if they do not spout wisdom on our TV screens every night, they have learnt well the lessons their Gurus taught them.

Behind all the bombast about India becoming a Vishwaguru and the constant harking back to our glorious past is the reality that we have betrayed the wisdom of our own religions. Mere recitation of Sanskrit mantras, as the great Shankaracharya said, is not going to grant absolution. But who remembers him or Swami Vivekanand or even the wise Sufi saints who lived and died by the doctrine of love for all? Even the West has forgotten Jesus, who pulled down a temple saying to the greedy Pharisees (ancient Jews) that they had converted His father’s house into a commercial place.

Behind every politician I see the unseen presence of their real image which, like Banquo’s ghost, hovers more prominently than their earnest advice. I hope they realise that you can fool some of the people for some of the time, but not all the people all of the time.


Why India needed to celebrate 75 yrs of end of WW-II Personnel from the subcontinent received 4,000 gallantry awards. It’s an unsurpassed record of bravery we should be proud of and not something to be hidden in embarrassment

Why India needed to celebrate 75 yrs of end of WW-II

Rahul Singh

On May 8, 1945, Nazi Germany surrendered to the Allies, marking the end of World War II in the western theatre. In the East, the war lingered on a little longer but virtually ended with the dropping of the devastating atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Japan’s Emperor Hirohito personally signed the unconditional surrender on August 15, 1945. The 75th anniversary of the end of the war was marked last week by celebrations and aerial flypasts in all the countries which were part of the victorious Allied forces, including Russia.

But from India and Pakistan, there was a deafening silence. Why? Because New Delhi — and presumably Islamabad as well — feels that this was a “colonial” conflict and therefore not worthy of any kind of official celebration. What utter nonsense and how disrespectful of the armed forces of the Indian subcontinent who fought so gallantly! At the peak of the war, 25 lakh troops from what is now India, Pakistan, Bangladesh and Nepal were part of the British Indian army, the largest force of volunteers ever assembled in history. They served in major battlefields, from North Africa to Italy and the Far East. The 5th Indian Division, for instance, fought the Italians in Sudan, then the Germans in Libya, before moving to Iraq to protect the oil fields, then was shifted to the Burma and Malaya front, before finally going to Indonesia to disarm the Japanese there.

Personnel from the Indian subcontinent received 4,000 gallantry awards and 31 Victory Crosses, the highest award given by the British for valour in action. It’s an unsurpassed record of bravery we should be proud of and not something to be hidden in embarrassment.

In 1962, when I had just graduated from Cambridge and was 22, an English college friend of mine, Charles Noon, and I decided to go overland by car to Egypt’s Port Said, from where I would take a ship to Bombay, and he would carry on to Rhodesia, as it was then called, to take up a teaching assignment. Charles had purchased a tiny car, the iconic Morris Mini, for the two-month journey which took us through France, Monaco, mainland Italy, Tunisia, Libya and finally, Egypt. We did everything on the cheap, staying at youth hostels and with friends, sometimes sleeping in the car, or on the beach. We traversed many of the war’s battlegrounds. In South Italy, in a town called Monte Cassino, an aged lady came up to me, pointing to my turban (I had long hair and a turban then), jabbering excitedly in Italian. I got hold of a passerby who understood English and asked him what she was saying. He replied that during the war she had seen many soldiers with turbans like mine, which was why she was so excited. She wondered if I was also a soldier! Later, I learnt that a pivotal battle of the war had taken place there, in which 240,000 Allied troops saw action, including the 4th Indian Division (which must have had a lot of Sikhs). It took four assaults, lasting for over a month of bitter fighting, to dislodge the well-entrenched Germans, on top of a hill, where there was a famous monastery (it was left in ruins). The eventual victory paved the way to Rome.

In North Africa, we passed through El Alamein, where two famed adversaries, Erwin Rommel (“The Desert Fox”) and Bernard Law (“Monty”) Montgomery, squared off in an epic encounter. Monty won a decisive victory. In fact, El Alamein and the battle of Stalingrad in Europe broke the back of the Germans. At El Alamein, I visited the war cemetery where 11,886 fallen soldiers from the Commonwealth are commemorated. There were hundreds of Indian names there, emphasising the vital part Indian troops played in that battle. The memory still brings tears to my eyes.

A maternal uncle of mine, Premindra Singh (“Prem”) Bhagat, then a Second Lieutenant in the Corps of Indian Engineers, was on a mine-clearing operation, an extremely hazardous task those days with no fancy gadgets, only the delicate poking of the sand with a bayonet to detect where a mine had been planted. His jeep was blown up, killing the other occupants and injuring him. But he carried on continuously for 96 hours. He was one of only two Indian officers ever to win the Victoria Cross “for his cold courage”, as the citation said. He went on to become a Lt General.

Vital though the role of the Indian army was in the North African theatres, in the East against the Japanese, it was decisive. After the fall of Singapore, the Japanese troops swept through Malaya and Burma and were knocking on India’s doors, with the intention of taking over the whole country (the only part of India they occupied were the Andamans). They were stopped at Kohima. There, on a tennis court and in the surrounding areas, some of the closest and bloodiest fighting of WW-II took place. Over 7,000 men on both sides died in just 64 hours. After that, the retreating Japanese forces suffered one defeat after another. The worst was at the Second Battle of Sittang river, where the 28th Japanese Army was annihilated. Of 20,000 men, only 7,000 survived. The casualties on the British and Indian side were just 95.

Earlier, Louis Mountbatten, Supreme Commander of the Allied forces in Burma, had been taunted that though Indians made good soldiers, they weren’t capable of leading. He decided to show that they could be outstanding officers as well. He chose three: Shankarrao Pandurang Patil Thorat (incidentally, the maternal grandfather of actor Rahul Bose), Lionel Protip (“Bogey”) Sen, and Kodandera Subayya Thimayya (they would go on to become among the most distinguished Generals of Independent India, while Thimayya became India’s third Army Chief). Mountbatten put them in command of large army formations and they won key battles against the Japanese.

The role of the Indian armed forces in World War II was an outstanding one. It should have been celebrated, not seen as part of an embarrassing “colonial” conflict. The writer is a veteran journalist