Sanjha Morcha

Proud he died fighting for nation: Mansa sepoy’s kin

Proud he died fighting for nation: Mansa sepoy’s kin

The inconsolable mother of Sepoy Gurtej Singh in Mansa.

Sukhmeet Bhasin
Tribune News Service

Bathinda, June 17

A pall of gloom descended on Birewala Dogra village in the Budhlada tehsil of Mansa district after the news of death of Sepoy Gurtej Singh (23) reached here. The sepoy was killed during a clash with the Chinese army in Ladakh on Monday night.

Gurtej is survived by his father Virsa Singh, mother Parkash Kaur and two elder brothers. Friends and relatives rushed to the martyr’s house and consoled the bereaved family. Mansa SSP Narinder Bhargav visited the family members. The body is expected to reach here on Thursday.

Virsa Singh said Gurtej’s elder brother got married some days back and he had spoken to Gurtej 20 days ago. In his last phone call, he had told them he would come back soon to meet his sister-in-law. Virsa Singh said Gurtej always wanted to serve the nation and had joined the Army two years ago. He said they were proud that their son laid down his life fighting for the nation.

Gurtej also told them that he was going on the border due to tension on the LAC and he won’t be able to contact them after that.

 


Martyrs cremated with state honours

Martyrs cremated with state honours

Family members pay tributes to Naib Subedar Mandeep Singh at Seel village near Ghanaur in Patiala. Tribune photos

Tribune News Service

Patiala/Gurdaspur, June 18

The body of Naib Subedar Mandeep Singh, who was killed during a face-off with Chinese troops at Galwan valley in Ladakh, was cremated with honours this evening. His family members, villagers and district officials bid adieu to the martyr at Seel village in Ghanaur block.

Despite the Covid-related restrictions, hundreds of people gathered at the village cremation ground to pay tributes to the soldier.

Residents recounted that many men from the village had served the armed forces. Ramandeep Kaur, wife of a former Army man, said she came from the family of soldiers. “My father served in the Army and so did my brother. Now my husband has retired from the service. My only son too wants to serve the nation. There are many such families in the village.”

Captain Narinder Singh, who served with Mandeep Singh for over 18 years, said Mandeep was courageous, honest and loyal. “He had all the qualities of an ideal soldier and we are proud of him. He belongs to a village that has sent many youths to the armed forces,” he said, adding that the compensation given to the family should be at least Rs 50 lakh.

Various political leaders, including Cabinet Minister Sadhu Singh Dharamsot, Ghanaur MLA Madan Lal Jalalpur and Sanaur MLA Harinderpal Singh Chandumajra, also paid their respects. At Bhojpur village in Gurdaspur, the mortal remains of Army man Satnam Singh (41) were consigned to flames.

The martyr’s body was airlifted from Leh to Chandigarh this morning. Later, a military chopper transported it till Tibri cantonment from where it was brought to the cremation ground in a cavalcade of Army vehicles.

The district administration ensured that the gathering was limited to 50. The pyre was lit by martyr’s son Parbhjot Singh. Contingents from the Army and the Punjab Police reversed their arms and fired shots in the air as a mark of respect to the departed soul.

Cabinet Minister Sukhjinder Singh Randhawa, who attended the cremation as a representative of the state, assured the deceased’s kin that besides a job to one family member, the government would soon release the ex gratia grant.

“The district administration has been instructed to construct a memorial gate on one of the roads leading to the village,” he said.


Gathering limited in Gurdaspur

  • At Bhojpur village in Gurdaspur, the mortal remains of Army man Satnam Singh (41) were consigned to flames
  • The martyr’s body was airlifted from Leh to Chandigarh on Thursday morning
  • The district administration ensured that the gathering was limited to 50. The pyre was lit by martyr’s son Parbhjot Singh

Admiring his courage

Mandeep was courageous, honest and loyal. He had all the qualities of an ideal soldier and we are proud of him. He belongs to a village that has sent many youths to the armed forces.— Capt Narinder Singh, Ex-serviceman


Govt hikes relief for kin to Rs 50 lakh Capt: Need to fix accountability

Govt hikes relief for kin to Rs 50 lakh

Tribune News Service

Chandigarh, June 18

The state government today decided to increase the ex gratia amount for the soldiers killed in action from Rs 10 lakh to Rs 50 lakh, along with a job to the next of kin. “This is the least we can do for our brave soldiers who make the supreme sacrifice for our motherland,” said Chief minister Capt Amarinder Singh.

Capt Amarinder Singh, Chief Minister

Should have ordered firing

If the unit was armed, as is being claimed now, the second-in-command should have ordered firing the moment the commanding officer fell to the Chinese treachery.

Terming as horrendous and barbaric the brutality with which 20 Indian soldiers were killed by the Chinese in Galwan valley, the CM demanded accountability for the loss of precious lives in the violent clash, and said the nation was expecting a befitting response from the Centre to this horrific attack.

“Our soldiers at the front should be clearly told that if they kill one of ours, you kill three of theirs,” said Capt Amarinder, making it clear that he was not speaking as a politician, but as a man who had been part of the Army and still loved the institution.

He said his stand on such issues has always been the same, and even after the Pulwama attack, he had declared that “if they kill one of ours we should kill two of theirs”.

Questioning why no orders to fire at the Chinese were given in the face of the brutal attack on the Indian soldiers, the CM said: “Somebody failed to do his job out there, and we need to find out who that was.”

“If the unit was armed, as is being claimed now, the second-in-command should have ordered firing the moment the commanding officer fell to the Chinese treachery. The nation wants to know why our men did not retaliate in the way they are trained to do, and why they did not open fire if they were carrying arms,” he said.

 


IAF airlifts bodies of Galwan martyrs from Leh The bodies were brought to Chandigarh in a service aircraft

IAF airlifts bodies of Galwan martyrs from Leh

The Indian Air Force on Thursday airlifted the mortal remains of 20 soldiers, who died in a violent face-off with Chinese troops in Galwan Valley this week, from Leh.

Tribune News Service
Chandigarh, June 18

The Indian Air Force on Thursday airlifted the mortal remains of 20 soldiers, who died in a violent face-off with Chinese troops in Galwan Valley this week, from Leh.

The bodies were brought to Chandigarh in a service aircraft and from here they will be further airlifted by different IAF aircraft to airports nearest to the fallen troops’ respective villages.

The aircraft reached Chandigarh in the afternoon. Full-service honours were accorded to the soldiers and wreaths were laid on their coffins.

Five of the fallen soldiers were from the region, with four being from Punjab and one from Himachal Pradesh. Their bodies are being sent from Chandigarh to their native place by road, and are expected to reach there by evening.

They include Nb Sub Satnam Singh of Gurdaspur, Nb Sub Mandeep Singh of Patiala, Sep Gurbinder Singh of Sangrur, Sep Gurtej Singh of Mansa and Sep Ankush Thakur of Hamirpur.

IAF aircraft would further ferry the bodies to Hyderabad, Patna, Ranchi, Bhubneshwar, Bagdogra, Panagarh and Raipur and from there the last leg of the journey to their home would be by road.

Of the 20 soldiers killed in the face-off, which include a colonel commanding an infantry battalion, 13 were from the Bihar Regiment, three from the Punjab Regiment, three from the artillery and one from another unit.


China brushes aside questions on attack by its troops on Indian soldiers, damming Galwan river Monday’s face-off was the biggest confrontation between the two militaries after their 1967 clashes in Nathu La

China brushes aside questions on attack by its troops on Indian soldiers, damming Galwan river

Beijing, June 18

Parrying questions about the brutal attack carried out by its troops on the Indian soldiers with iron rods and spikes on June 15, China on Thursday also declined to respond to queries on reports of it building a dam on the Galwan river at the Sino-Indian border to obstruct its flow.

Foreign Ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian in his media briefing skirted questions for a second consecutive day about the casualties suffered by the Chinese troops in their clash with the Indian soldiers at the Galwan Valley on Monday night.

Asked about allegations that Col Santosh Babu and other Indian soldiers were brutally attacked with iron rods and spikes by Chinese soldiers and whether the confrontation started when the Indian troops arrive to demolish structures set up by China along the Line of Actual Control (LAC), Zhao reiterated China’s allegation, squarely blaming the Indian troops for the incident.

“The right and wrong of this case is very clear and responsibility doesn’t lie with the Chinese side,” he said, adding that China has provided the details of the case.

India has trashed China’s claim of sovereignty over the Galwan Valley, saying such “exaggerated” and “untenable” claims are contrary to the understanding reached during a high-level military dialogue on June 6.

China’s foreign ministry as well as the military this week claimed that the Galwan Valley has always been a part of the country.

In a sharp reaction to the claim by China’s People’s Liberation Army (PLA), Spokesperson in the Ministry of External Affairs Anurag Srivastava referred to an agreement reached between the Chinese and Indian militaries on “disengagement” during the Lt General-level talks on June 6.

“Making exaggerated and untenable claims is contrary to this understanding,” he said in a statement in New Delhi early on Thursday.

The Galwan Valley was the site of the violent clash between the two militaries on Monday night in which a Colonel and 19 other Indian Army personnel were killed. China’s official media has acknowledged casualties on the Chinese side without mentioning numbers.

To a question about satellite photos taken on June 16 showing China building a dam on the Galwan river blocking its water flow and whether it violated any agreement with India, Zhao said, “I am not aware of the specifics you mentioned”.

During Thursday’s press briefing, Zhao referred to Wednesday’s telephone talks between External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar and his Chinese counterpart Wang Yi during which, he pointed out that, “both sides agreed to deal with the serious situation caused by the conflict in a just manner and jointly observe the consensus reached at the commander level meeting, de-escalate tensions as soon as possible”.

The two ministers have also agreed based on the agreements reached by the two countries reached so far to maintain the peace and tranquillity in the border areas, he said.

“I would like to stress the Indian troops at the western section of the boundary and some other areas crossed LAC and tried to unilaterally change the status quo,” he alleged.

“The Chinese troops are committed to uphold peace and tranquillity along the border areas. They have been exercising restraint. They are determined to safeguard our national sovereignty and security”, he said.

“We urge the Indian side to immediately withdraw their personnel crossing the line, strictly restrain its troops and observe consensus reached by the leaders of two countries and agreements existing so far and jointly work with us to uphold peace tranquillity in the border area,” he said.

After this incident, both sides are in communication and coordination on the matter through diplomatic and military channels, he said.

“Both sides agreed to deal with the serious matter caused by the conflict at the valley in a just manner, jointly observe the commander level talks consensus and deescalate the tensions as soon as possible and safeguard the peace and tranquillity,” he said.

“Currently the overall situation is stable and controllable. We believe under the guidance of the important consensus reached by the leaders of the two countries the two sides can deal with the relevant matter jointly safeguard peace and stability at the border areas and work for the sound development of bilateral relations”, he said.

During the briefing, the spokesman read out the whole press statement issued by the Chinese Foreign Ministry on Wednesday on the telephonic conversation between Wang and Jaishankar.

A large number of Indian and Chinese troops have been engaged in an eyeball-to-eyeball situation in Galwan Valley and certain other areas of eastern Ladakh for the last five weeks, including in Pangong Tso, Galwan Valley, Demchok and Daulat Beg Oldie in eastern Ladakh.

Monday’s face-off was the biggest confrontation between the two militaries after their 1967 clashes in Nathu La when India lost around 80 soldiers while over 300 Chinese army personnel were killed in the face-off.

The Indian Army has been fiercely objecting to the transgressions, and demanded their immediate withdrawal for restoration of peace and tranquillity in the area. Both sides held a series of talks in the last few days to resolve the row.

The India-China border dispute covers the 3,488-km-long Line of Actual Control (LAC). China claims Arunachal Pradesh as part of southern Tibet, while India contests it. PTI


Galwan Valley clash: People in 2 Bengal villages wait patiently for their fallen heroes

Galwan Valley clash: People in 2 Bengal villages wait patiently for their fallen heroes

Rajesh Orang (26), who was one of the 20 jawans who were killed during the face-off between Indian and Chinese troops. PTI

Kolkata, June 18

Grief and anger marked the mood in two villages of West Bengal, the residents of which are waiting patiently for the bodies of their two fallen heroes to return from the icy heights of Ladakh’s Galwan Valley.

The bodies of the two soldiers from West Bengal, who were among the 20 Indian Army personnel killed in a clash with Chinese troops in eastern Ladakh’s Galwan Valley, are scheduled to arrive at their homes on Thursday evening, an Army spokesperson said here.

Women in Havildar Bipul Roy’s Bindipara village in Alipurduar district have abstained from cooking food in remembrance of their beloved son.

A stage has been hurriedly set up by the slain soldier’s friends for laying the casket upon its arrival to the tiny north Bengal hamlet surrounded by forests and tea gardens.

Roy’s body will be flown to the Bagdogra Airport near Siliguri, from where the coffin will be brought to Bindipara by road, the Army spokesperson said.

Hundreds of kilometres away, in Sepoy Rajesh Orang’s Belgoria village in Birbhum district, people from near and far have thronged the slain soldier’s hutment to pay their tributes.

The casket carrying his body will reach the Panagarh Air Force base in West Burdwan district in a military aircraft in the afternoon and will then be taken to Belgoria by road, the officer said.

Members of Orang’s family were too grief-stricken to only say that state minister Ashish Banerjee had visited them in the morning to convey his condolences. PTI


China to lose two Indian public sector tenders after Galwan Valley clash Railways to terminate Chinese company’s contract due to ‘poor progress’

China to lose two Indian public sector tenders after Galwan Valley clash

Tribune News Service

New Delhi, June 18

In what could be a sign of things to come, two large public sector undertakings are on the verge of cancelling contracts given to Chinese companies, including some linked to the People’s Liberation Army which had killed 20 Indian soldiers in a clash in Galwan Valley.

In one case, the ostensible reason for the railways deciding to terminate the contract of a Chinese company is poor progress. But “ownership pattern” is the cause for BSNL being asked not to permit Huawei and ZTE to participate in the tenders for upgrading the 4G network.

The railways contract of Rs 471 crore to Beijing National Railway R & D Institute of Signal on the Eastern Dedicated Freight Corridor, that is itself making slow progress, is being cancelled for completing only 20 per cent of the work so far.

In case of telecom sector project, Department of Telecom (DoT) has hinted at the “ownership pattern” of the two Chinese telecom companies as the reason for asking BSNL to steer clear of them. The DoT may also ask private companies to also not use equipment by such Chinese companies. Both Huawei and ZTE have faced hurdles in other countries because their owners have had connections to PLA.

In case of the railways, officials cite poor performance and inability to deliver the project on time as the reasons since it is a World Bank-funded project. Dedicated Freight Corridor Corporation Limited (DFCCIL) has already written to the World Bank for terminating the contract. The Chinese company is also being charged with not sharing technical documents and not posting engineers at the project site.


Chinese activity on Indian side led to Galwan Valley clash: MEA Two sides are in regular touch

Chinese activity on Indian side led to Galwan Valley clash: MEA

rmy personnel carry the mortal remains of Bihar Regiment jawans Kundan Kumar and Jai Kishore, after a wreath-laying ceremony at Jaiprakash Narayan Airport in Patna, Thursday, on June 18, 2020. PTI

Tribune News Service

New Delhi, June 18

It was an attempt by the Chinese People’s Liberation Army (PLA) to erect a structure in Galwan valley on the Indian side of the LAC that triggered the clash, the Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) reiterated at a media briefing here on Thursday.

On Wednesday, External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar had also said the source of the dispute was the attempt by PLA to erect a structure in Galwan valley on the Indian side of the LAC on June 15.

Read also: China to lose two Indian public sector tenders after Galwan Valley clash

“While this became a source of dispute, the Chinese side took pre-meditated and planned action that was directly responsible for the resulting violence and casualties. It reflected an intent to change the facts on ground in violation of all our agreements to not change the status quo,’’ said MEA spokesperson Anurag Srivastav.

He recalled that at the meeting of senior Military Commanders held on June 6, an agreement was reached on de-escalation and disengagement along the LAC. But the PLA took premeditated and planned action that was “directly responsible for the resulting violence and casualties suffered by both sides”, he said.

Given its responsible approach to border management, India is very clear that all its activities are always within the Indian side of the LAC. “We expect the Chinese side to also confine its activities to its side of the LAC,” added Srivastav.

The two sides remain in regular touch through their respective embassies and foreign offices while at the ground level the two sides have maintained communication at the commanders’ level.  Meetings of other established diplomatic mechanisms such as Working Mechanism for Consultation and Coordination on Border Affairs (WMCC) are under discussion.

While we remain firmly convinced of the need for maintenance of peace and tranquillity in the borders areas and the resolution of differences through dialogue, at the same time, as PM Modi stated, we are also strongly committed to ensuring India’s sovereignty and territorial integrity, he added.

Read also: clck link

Indian troops on border duty carry arms: Jaishankar to Rahul

Indian, Chinese armies hold Major General-level talks for third straight day

Why Indian soldiers were sent ‘unarmed to martyrdom’ in Ladakh: Rahulhina brushes aside questions on attack by its troops on Indian soldiers, damming Galwan river


Indian and Chinese militaries to take part in Russian Victory Day parade

Indian and Chinese militaries to take part in Russian Victory Day parade

Russian servicemen march during the Victory Day parade at Red Square in Moscow in 2015. Reuters file

Shubhadeep Choudhury

Tribune News Service

Kolkata, June 18

Indian and Chinese militaries, involved in a fierce clash in the Ladakh on Monday, will have a different kind of engagement next week. Contingents from the two armies will march in Russia’s historic Red Square on June 24 on the occasion of military parade being organised by Russia to mark the 75th anniversary of Soviet Union’s victory over Nazi Germany.

Besides India and China, troops from 18 more foreign countries including USA, UK and France would march alongside the personnel from the Russian armed forces to celebrate the diamond jubilee of the great victory.

India will send a contingent of 75 personnel from its three armed forces to Moscow to participate in the event, the Defence Ministry has said.

“On the occasion of the 75th anniversary of the victory in the Second World War, there will be a military parade in Moscow to honour the heroism and sacrifices made by the Russians and other friendly people. The Russian Defence Minister has invited an Indian contingent to take part in the Victory Day Parade scheduled to be held on June 24, 2020, in Moscow,” stated a press release issued by MoD.

“The participation in the parade will be a mark of tribute and solidarity with the people of Russia at a time when they remember their heroes of the Great Patriotic War,” the release added.

China watchers here said that troops of PLA Honor Guard — composed of representatives of the People’s Liberation Army Ground Force, Navy and Air Force — have already landed in Moscow to participate in the parade.

China also used the opportunity to showcase the indigenously developed transport aircraft Y-20. PLA soldiers chosen for the parade landed in the Russian capital aboard the aircraft.

The Victory Day parade is held annually on May 9 but it got postponed this year because the preparations for it could not be carried out amid the coronavirus spread.

However, it was on June 24 in 1945 when the legendary historic parade of victors took place, when soldiers, who fought for Moscow and defended Leningrad and Stalingrad and liberated much of Europe and stormed Berlin, had marched at the Red Square.


Row over troops ‘not using’ firearmsRow over troops ‘not using’ firearms

Row over troops ‘not using’ firearms

External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar. File photo

Ajay Banerjee

Tribune News Service

New Delhi, June 18

Three days after 20 soldiers were killed in a clash with the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) of China in the Galwan valley, a row has erupted over the use of firearms or the lack of these.

External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar, responding to claims that the Indian troops were ‘unarmed’ during the clash with the Chinese, tweeted: “All troops on border duty always carry arms, especially when leaving post. Those at Galwan on June 15 did so. Long-standing practice (as per 1996 & 2005 agreements) not to use firearms during faceoffs.” He was responding to a tweet by Congress leader Rahul Gandhi, asking why Indian soldiers were “sent unarmed to martyrdom”.

Let us not muddle facts @DrSJaishankar. Please tell why no firearms were carried. Stop quoting agreement on border management to justify sending soldiers unarmed in tactical military situation. —Randeep Singh Surjewala, Cong Leader

He put out a video message: “I want to know who sent these unarmed soldiers in the harm’s way and why. Who is responsible?” The Jaishankar-Rahul spat comes just a day ahead of the all-party meeting convened by the PM on the Galwan clash.

Joining the debate, Punjab CM Capt Amarinder Singh said: “Somebody failed to do his job out there and we need to find out who that was.” Senior Army officers said there was a standard operating procedure. Even if a forward team went ahead for negotiations with the Chinese along the LAC, there was a laid down response mechanism and this could be using firearms in the face of enemy action.