Sanjha Morcha

Anomalies ail defence pension system

Sporadic military pension reforms that don’t satisfy pensioners are of no help. A dispassionate approach is necessary to oversee the burgeoning pension confusion. It could possibly include adopting a scheme along the lines of the New Pension Scheme, customised for retiring defence personnel in keeping with systems prevalent in militaries abroad.

Anomalies ail defence pension system

WAY FORWARD: There is a need to strike a balance between the government’s financial constraints and service personnel’s interests. PTI

Amit Cowshish & Rahul Bedi

Amit Cowshish, Ex-Financial Adviser, acquisition, MoD & Rahul Bedi Senior Journalist

THE harsh reality of the military pension structure is that few among the retirees and in the government really understand its complexity in totality. Recurring changes in pension configuration have resulted in such complex anomalies that implementing every new decision poses fresh, and at times, insurmountable challenges.

Consequently, the three pension sanctioning offices of the Defence Accounts Department (DAD) in Prayagraj, Mumbai and New Delhi have been braving the ire of thousands of military pensioners nationwide. And even though the DAD is neither responsible for policy decisions nor for the disbursement of monthly pensions to about 85% of the pensioners, it remains the retirees’ whipping boy.

One of the foremost incongruities regarding military pensions concerns civilian employees retiring from varied defence departments. For years, military pensioners have been railing against their civilian colleagues for cornering a substantial part of — and needlessly inflating — the fast-burgeoning defence pension budget that has escalated 585 times from Rs 228.52 crore in 1980-81 to Rs 1,33,825 crore in 2020-21.

While some of these ‘defence civilian pensioners’ have retired from establishments like workshops, depots and dockyards headed by military personnel, others have superannuated from ordnance factories and the Defence Research and Development Organisation. They have been clubbed with military pensioners because their salaries emanated from the services’ revenue budget whilst in service.

Other civilians, like those retiring from Ministry of Defence (MoD)-administered organisations like the Indian Coast Guard and the Defence Accounts Department, receive their pensions from a separate budget managed by the Ministry of Finance (MoF).

Successive governments’ inexplicable failure to maintain separate accounts of expenditure on military and defence civilian pensioners, however, has given rise to self-serving distortion of data on the latter. This, in turn, has buttressed outrageous arguments, frequently voiced on social media, that the latter are an ‘extortionate’ drain on overall defence pensions.

Many service personnel argue that this perceived anomaly can be resolved by simply shifting the civilian pension liability to the MoF-managed pension budget. But in reality, it makes little or no difference which budget these pensioners get paid from, as the money emanates from a common source: the Consolidated Fund of India. Therefore, shifting the liability from the MoD’s pension budget to that of the MoF’s will simply lead to the annual allocations being similarly adjusted in merely a deft accounting manoeuvre.

Several defence analysts and service personnel also speciously maintain that there is little need to employ so many civilians in military establishments, and that many of the jobs they presently perform can either be dispensed with, or better performed by uniformed personnel. If so, this culling should have been executed long ago, even though all three services had previously demanded an increase in their respective civilian and military manpower, paradoxically at odds with their enduring objections regarding pension payments.

In December 2016, the MoD-appointed Committee of Experts headed by Lt Gen DB Shekatkar (retd) for enhancing combat capability and rebalancing the armed forces’ expenditure had recommended the restructuring of the civilian workforce of the Military Engineer Services (MES) by managing their tasks via departmentally employed staff and by outsourcing.

This resulted in a cosmetic abolition of 9,304 MES civilian posts out of a total of 13,157 positions that were lying vacant, indicating that the entire work could be managed by the remaining 3,853 personnel. That is, indeed commendable, but nothing has been heard of since about abolishing posts in other defence departments, outsourcing work, or adoption of a government-owned-contractor-operated (GOCO) model for managing military workshops, depots and dockyards. Hence, in an ironic move reminiscent of ‘ghost’ jobs in numerous civilian sectors, all that the MoDs fiscal measures achieved was the termination of some 9,000 jobs that simply did not exist.

Such superficial steps focused on defence civilians can in no way resolve the problem of rising defence pension budgets. In any case, in time, retired civilian pensioners will cease to be a burden on the state exchequer, following the discontinuance of assured pensions for all civilian employees, including those in defence, paramilitary and police departments recruited on or after January 1, 2004, and they all mandatorily migrate to a market-driven New Pension Scheme (NPS).

Pensions for the uniformed personnel will, however, continue as before.

Therefore, the problem of a rising defence pension budget can only be resolved by focusing directly on military pensions and striking a balance between the government’s financial constraints, service personnel’s interests and overall financial practicality.

Sporadic military pension reforms that do not satisfy the pensioners and ill-conceived ideas of limiting the entitlement of one or the other of their categories that are routinely struck down by the courts are also of no help. The recent concept mooted by the Department of Military Affairs (DMA) to introduce a system of graded pensions, with only those retiring with at least 35 years of service being entitled to full pension, is a prime example of such an approach. This idea is inherently impractical, not only because of its impact on military morale, but also its legality.

Successive court judgments have held pension to be a legal right which a pensioner cannot be deprived of, even in part, except in accordance with the authority of law. It may not be easy to give a legal veneer to the CDS-proposed graded pension scheme and to successfully defend it in court, a challenge it is almost definite to face, even if sanctified through executive fiat. Besides, pursuing such a strategy, too, is unlikely to resolve any outstanding problem.

Pension is a basic right for services rendered. The amount payable or the quantum of periodic increase can neither be determined by the beneficiaries nor claimed self-righteously as a matter of right with disregard for overall financial implications.

More importantly, it is beyond the vast capability of information technology professionals to develop software programmes to capture, coordinate and administer all pension-related data, some of which may not even be available in existing records. The inbuilt anomalies in the complex system, too, are self-defeating for any credible software to competently manage pension payments that remain a riddle within an enigma.

Accordingly, a dispassionate approach is necessary to oversee the burgeoning pension confusion. It could possibly include adopting a scheme along NPS lines, customised for retiring defence personnel in keeping with systems prevalent in militaries abroad.

 


Despite facing teargas, farmer helps cop drink water; netizens all praise for it as video goes viral

Despite facing teargas, farmer helps cop drink water; netizens all praise for it as video goes viral

Tribune Web Desk
Chandigarh, November 28

Farmers faced teargas and water cannons along the Delhi-Haryana border. They clashed with police on Friday as they marched towards the National Captial as part of their ‘Delhi Chalo’ protest.

Despite such severe circumstances, a video clip filled with complete compassion has surfaced—proving that humanity is above all.

Farmers stepped forward to extend a helping hand to others, including the cops.

A clip showing a farmer offering, and helping a policeman drink water has gone viral.

Twitter user, Gurpreet S. Sahota, shared the clip, saying: “So what if policemen released cold water on farmers on a chilly day, that was their duty. Our Guru taught us to be humble, serve and share, what we have. It’s our duty.”

Netizens were touched by this thoughtful gesture, and appreciated farmers, and the Sikh spirit:

 


Not anti-farmer like you: Capt Amarinder slams AAP Amarinder met Home Minister Amit Shah earlier in the day

Not anti-farmer like you: Capt Amarinder slams AAP

Punjab Chief Minister Capt Amarinder Singh addresses media after a meeting with Home Minister Amit Shah at his residence, in New Delhi. PTI

Tribune News Service
New Delhi, December 3

Punjab Chief Minister Amarinder Singh on Thursday lashed out at AAP for “misrepresenting” his statement in respect of the need to end the farmers’ protests in the interest of national security.

After AAP tweeted asking “What kind of pressure has Amit Shah exerted on Capt Amarinder Singh for him to go from ‘will resign for farmers’ to ‘farmers are a threat to the country’.”

https://twitter.com/i/status/1334540733869506561

Amarinder Singh retorted sharply saying, “You in AAP think everyone is anti-farmer like you. I never called farmers a threat to national security. My remarks were in context of prolonged stand-off which our hostile neighbours, whom the sons of these very farmers are fighting, can exploit.”


Farmers refuse to have ‘sarkari khana’, want surety on MSP, withdrawal of agri Acts Protesting farmers also seek guaranteed MSP on all 23 crops, its implementation across the country

Farmers refuse to have ‘sarkari khana’, want surety on MSP, withdrawal of agri Acts

Farmers representatives, holding talks with the Centre, have their own food (langar) during the lunch break, at Vigyan Bhawan in New Delhi on Dec. 3, 2020. — PTI

Vibha Sharma
Tribune News Service
New Delhi, December 3

Like the last meeting, farmer unions refused to have “sarkari khana” at Vigyan Bhawan.

“We have not come here to have food but to resolve the issue,” they said. During the lunch break, farmers decided to partake langar brought from a gurdwara.

In the last meeting also they had refused to have tea and instead asked Union ministers to have kheer, jalebi and langar with them at the border.

Normally during official meetings at Vigyan Bhawan, tea, snacks, lunch, etc., are served to participants.

Meanwhile, it remains to be seen if the meeting will bear any positive results as farmers remain firm on their stated stance.

Farmers are demanding guaranteed MSP on all the 23 crops, not just paddy and rice, and this be implemented across the country. They also remain adamant on withdrawal of three Central Acts.

Farmers said they did not want any amendment but complete withdrawal. They also said they would not leave Delhi till this was done.


1,525 kg of explosives, 6,000 detonators seized in Meghalaya; 6 arrested Acting on a tip-off about possible movement of explosives, police conducted raids in the 4 Kilo area on Wednesday night

1,525 kg of explosives, 6,000 detonators seized in Meghalaya; 6 arrested

Photo for representation only

Shillong, December 4

Six people were arrested in Meghalaya’s East Jaintia Hills district with a huge quantity of explosives and detonators, police said on Friday.

Acting on a tip-off about possible movement of explosives, police conducted raids in the 4 Kilo area on Wednesday night, they said.

An SUV with Assam registration was intercepted at Kongong in the Ladrymbai police outpost area, police said.

Ten cartons with 250 kg of explosives (2,000 gelatin sticks), 1,000 live detonators and eight rolls of fuse were found in the car, said Assistant Inspector General of Police GK Iangrai.

Two persons who were travelling in the vehicle were arrested, he said.

Based on the information obtained from them, four more persons were arrested, leading to a hideout in the 5 Kilo area in Khliehriat where the explosives were suspected to have been loaded in the vehicle, he added.

On search of the place, 51 cartons with approximately 1,275 kg of explosives (10,200 gelatine sticks), 5,000 detonators and eight rolls of fuse were seized.

“Altogether 1,525 kg of explosives were seized in the operation,” Iangrai said.

A case has been registered under the Explosives Act and other relevant sections, he said, adding that an investigation is under way. PTI


DSGMC sends legal notice to Kangana Ranaut over ‘derogatory’ tweets against farmers

DSGMC sends legal notice to Kangana Ranaut over 'derogatory' tweets against farmers

Kangana Ranaut. File photo

New Delhi, December 4

The Delhi Sikh Gurdwara Management Committee (DSGMC) has sent a legal notice to actor Kangana Ranaut, seeking an unconditional apology for her “derogatory” tweets against farmers and activists involved in the protest against the Centre’s farm laws, the committee’s president said on Friday.

The Bollywood star, who is known for her combative comments, was also asked to remove the particular tweets.

“We have sent a legal notice to @KanganaTeam for her derogatory tweet calling the aged mother of a farmer as a woman available for Rs 100. Her tweets portray farmers protest as anti-national. We demand an unconditional apology from her for her insensitive remarks on farmers protest,” Manjinder Singh Sirsa, president of DSGMC, said in a tweet.

Earlier this week, Ranaut misidentified a woman farmer from Punjab as Bilkis Bano, the octogenarian who made international headlines during the anti-CAA protests earlier this year in the Delhi neighbourhood of Shaheen Bagh.

She shared a tweet alleging that the ‘Shaheen Bagh dadi’ also joined the farmers’ agitation over the new agri laws at various border points of the national capital.

She retweeted the post with pictures of two elderly women, including Bilkis Bano, and wrote that the “same Dadi” who featured in Time Magazine was “available in 100 rupees”.

Ranaut was also embroiled in a bitter war of words with actor-singer Diljit Dosanjh over the matter on Thursday.

Thousands of farmers have gathered at Delhi’s gateways to demand a repeal of the Centre’s three new farm laws. The protesting farmers, mainly from Punjab and Haryana as well as Uttar Pradesh, are worried the new laws will eliminate the safety cushion of a Minimum Support Price and procurement system, while rendering ineffective the mandi system that ensures earnings for various stakeholders in the farm sector.

The government has been in talks with farmer leaders to resolve the issue. PTI

73-year-old protester lashes out at Kangana Ranaut; asks ‘kyu mainu badnaam kar rahi hai?’

After this tweet, Kangana is facing a huge backlash on social media

73-year-old protester lashes out at Kangana Ranaut; asks 'kyu mainu badnaam kar rahi hai?'

Diljit Dosanjh calls Kangana Ranaut ‘mannerless’ as Twitter war comes to an end; she signs off as ‘Babbar sherni’

Kangana deleted her post, but didn’t refrain from hitting back, calling Diljit filmmaker Karan Johar’s pet

Diljit Dosanjh calls Kangana Ranaut 'mannerless' as Twitter war comes to an end; she signs off as 'Babbar sherni'

Mumbai, December 3 

The Twitter war between Diljit Dosanjh and Kangana Ranaut has been getting uglier all through Thursday.

It all started when Diljit criticised Kangana for misidentifying an elderly Sikh woman, who had joined the farmers’ protest, as Bilkis Bano of Shaheen Bagh. He also shared a video of the elderly lady in question, revealing that she was Mahinder Kaur.

Soon, Kangana deleted her post, but didn’t refrain from hitting back, calling Diljit filmmaker Karan Johar’s pet.

“Ooo Karan johar ke paltu, jo dadi Saheen Baag mein apni citizenship keliye protest kar rahi thi wohi Bilkis Bano dadi ji Farmers ke MSP ke liye bhi protest karti hue dikhi. Mahinder Kaur ji ko toh main janti bhi nahin. Kya drama chalaya hai tum logon ne (Karan Johar’s pet, the grandma who was protesting in Shaheen Bagh for her citizenship, the same grandma was seen protesting with the farmers. I don’t even know who is Mahinder Kaur. What is this drama)? Stop this right now,” she tweeted.


Also read:

Swara Bhasker calls Diljit Dosanjh ‘a star’ amid war with Kangana Ranaut; Richa Chadha says one must not fight with Punjabis

Javed Akhtar submits statement in defamation plaint against Kangana Ranaut

BJP leader RP Singh demands apology from Kangana Ranaut over tweet against elderly Sikh woman

Plea filed to suspend Kangana Ranaut’s Twitter account in Bombay HC; here’s her reaction


In another tweet, she posted: “Listen you vultures, do not consider my silence as my weakness. I see how you are instigating the innocent by lying to them and are using them. Just like Shaheen Bagh, the truth behind these protests will soon be out. Then I will write a brilliant speech and leave with your faces black.”

She signed off as ‘Babbar sherni’.

Diljit retaliated: “Tuneh Jitne Logon Ke Saath Film Ki Tu Un Sab Ki Paaltu Hai…? Fer To List Lambi Ho Jaegi Maalko Ki..? Eh Bollywood Wale Ni PUNJAB Wale aa .. Hikk Te Vajj Sadey Jhooth bol kar logo ko badhkana aur emotions se khailna woh toh aap achey se janti ho (Are you the pet of all the people you have worked with? Then the list of your bosses must be long. This is not Bollywood but Punjab. Manipulating people by lying and playing with their emotions is something you know very well).”

He also asserted that he is not from Bollywood but Punjab, and will not take her attack and give it back with more power.

At one point, he said: “Dimagh theek aa Tera (are you sane)?”

Kangana responded: “Oh chamche chal, tu jinki chat chat ke kaam leta hai, main unki roz bajati hoon, jayada mat uchal, main Kangana Ranaut hoon tere jaisi chamchi nahin jo jhoot boloon, maine sirf aur sirf Shaheen Baag wali protestor pe comment kiya tha (You are a bootlicker, the one you try to please, I take them to task everyday. I am Kangana Ranaut, not a bootlicker like you who would lie. I only spoke about the Shaheen Bagh protestor), if anyone can prove otherwise I will apologise.”

Diljit called Kangana mannerless.

“Bolan Di Tameez Ni Tainu.. Kisey di Maa Bhen Nu.. Aurat Ho Ke Dujeyq Nu Tu 100 100 Rs. Wali das di an.. SADE PUNJAB DIAN MAAVA SADEY LAI RAB NE.. Eh tan Bhoonda De Khakhar nu Shedh Leya Tu.. PUNJABI GOOGLE KAR LI (You have no sense how to speak to someone’s mother or sister. You are a woman yourself and are calling another one would work for Rs 100. Our mothers of Punjab are like God to us. You have poked the hornet’s nest. Google this Punjabi now),” he wrote.

Soon, things took a nasty turn when Kangana again said she was talking about the Shaheen Bagh ‘dadi’.

Replying to her, Diljit said: “Oye Bad Dimag Batmeez… Gal HO RAHI JIS MAA NU TU 100 rs. Dihadi wai Keh ke foto paee c.. Os Bebe Da JAVAB Sun Leya c Yaan Dobara Bheja.. Avi gal na ghumaa Hun.. GAL KAR NI BHAJJI DA .. Jod tod Bollywood ch chalda hona Tera.. Punjabi’an Naal Ni Chalna (Oh such a big fool. We’re talking about the elderly woman whose photo you shared and said she protests for Rs 100 a day. Did you hear her answer or do I need to send it to you again? Your manipulations will work in Bollywood but not in Punjab).”

In another tweet he said: “What school taught you to demean people’s mothers and sisters and call them labourers who’d protest for Rs 100.”

“Ah Tainu Khoob Kharabe Wale Lagde ne..? Har gal Te Khoob Kharaba.. Chauni ki an Tu ? Eh Sadey Lai RABB DA ROOP NE. Tainu Bolan Di Tameez Ni Sikahi Kisey Ne. Punjabi Dasan Ge Tainu Kidan Boli da Apne Ton Vadeya Naal (Do they appear to you as ones who would incite violence? Every word you say is like that, what do you want? They are like God for us. Did nobody teach you etiquette of speech? Punjabis will teach you how to speak to those who are elder to you),” he wrote in one tweet.

“Peaceful PROTEST CHAL RIHA.. Sab Kisaan’an De Naal aa .. @KanganaTeam Edey varge kush Lok Jo Bhonk Ke Mahaul Kharab karn di te divert karn Di Politics khel rahe aa.. Sarey Note Karn.. Eh Janani Shuru ton Hee Muddey nu Divert karn Da kam kardi Rahi aa.. Punjabi Jaande aa tainu (A peaceful protest is on. This lady is trying to divert the issue by highlighting nonsensical topics. She is known for this trait. Punjabis know this),” he said. — IANS

 


Centre ready for some amendments in farm laws But farm unions want laws revoked | Next meeting tomorrow | Will consider genuine concerns: Tomar

Centre ready for some amendments in farm laws

Vibha Sharma

Tribune News Service

New Delhi, December 3

The meeting between farmers’ representatives and the Centre on Thursday failed to break the impasse, but there was some movement forward. The BJP-led NDA government appeared to soften its stance, agreeing to make some amendments and conceding to certain points raised by the farmers’ leaders, who said they would decide whether to attend the next meeting on December 5 after consultations on Friday.

Read also:

Citing security, Capt seeks urgent resolution

New Delhi: Punjab CM Capt Amarinder Singh demanded urgent resolution of farmers’ issues, citing strain on security and state’s economy, after he met Union Home Minister Amit Shah here on Thursday morning. “My appeal to farmers is to find a quick solution. It is impacting national security and Punjab’s economy,” he said. Ahead of the CM’s meeting, Congress leader Rahul Gandhi tweeted, “Anything less than the repeal of three black agricultural laws would mean betrayal of the interests of farmers.” TNS

Farmers turn down govt’s lunch offer

Farm leaders on Thursday refused the lunch offered by the government during their meeting with the three Union ministers here and preferred to eat food ferried in a van from the Singhu border. They reportedly told the government to focus on resolving the issues instead of trying to play a good host by offering lunch. “How can we have government lunch when our fellow farmers are sitting on roads,” remarked one of them.

2 UP highways closed

The police on Thursday shut routes on two NHs connecting Ghaziabad to Delhi as farmers remained adamant on their demands. A group of farmers blocked the Jaipur-Delhi highway. A protest was staged on the Rajasthan-Haryana border in Alwar district.

Tikait for jail provision

Ghaziabad: BKU chief Naresh Tikait on Thursday demanded a provision for jail for traders seeking to purchase farmers’ produce below the MSP. He was addressing farmers on Delhi-Ghaziabad border where they also had a few skirmishes with the police.

Refusing “sarkari lunch and tea” during the marathon seven-hour meeting at the Vigyan Bhawan here, the union leaders demanded guaranteed MSP (minimum support price) for 23 crops. Besides Agriculture Minister Narendra Singh Tomar, Union Ministers Piyush Goyal and Som Parkash participated in the talks.

Post meeting, Tomar said the talks had concluded in a “very positive atmosphere”, adding that there was “no ego involved” and the government had agreed to “discuss and consider with an open mind” all points of concern raised by the farmers, including strengthening of the mandi system and tax parity with the proposed private mandis. “We will hold discussions on how to make the APMC stronger… farmers’ concerns over the SDM courts will too be addressed… We are also ready to discuss the air quality ordinance and electricity Act,” Tomar said. “They want amendments, but we want the Acts repealed. Besides, they have only given us assurance (on amendments),” pointed out Shiv Kumar ‘Kakkaji’. Kavitha Kuruganti of the Mahila Kisan Adhikar Manch said: “It is not clear as to what the government wants as it is willing to make only amendments.” The BKU (Ekta-Ugrahan) chief, Joginder Singh, said they wanted the “black laws” to be repealed forthwith and nothing less was acceptable. “We are not going to vacate the protest site, whatever tactics the government employs,” he warned.