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Why OROP is important for ex-servicemen BY Col Dabby S de Mello (Retd)

The concept was formulated after deliberations keeping all stakeholders in the loop. It was approved by both UPA- as well as NDA-dominated Parliaments.

Why OROP is important for ex-servicemen
Ex-servicemen protesting for OROP at Jantar Mantar, New Delhi, recently. PTI

Aquestion often asked: “Why One Rank One Pension (OROP) only for military retirees?” Before attempting an answer, it is important to know that the acronym OROP is not an entirely a correct definition of the issue. It should have been “Same Rank, Same Service Tenure, Same Pension” — SRSSTSP. Since it would have been quite a mouthful, the term OROP became common.OROP, the genesis

Maj-Gen Rajinder Singh ‘Sparrow’Shergill,  a Cavalry Officer, hero of Zojila and twice Mahavir Chakra awardee, after his retirement and, as a sitting MP in the early eighties, spoke thus in Parliament: “I have the honour to state that I retired from the army as a Maj-Gen and have two sons serving in the army. Assuming that they also retire as Maj-Gens and, after retirement, if they stayed under the same roof as I, the sons would be getting more pension than their father because the father retired earlier. What a dichotomy!” Mrs Indira Gandhi, then Prime Minister heard the General Officer with rapt attention and understood what he spoke. A sharp woman, she was immediately convinced in principle and realised the dilemma of Maj-Gen ‘Sparrow’, and that of all military retirees, needed holistic consideration/re-evaluation. The same day in 1983, she constituted a committee headed by KP Singhdeo, a Brigadier in Territorial Army and a sitting MP from Odisha, to examine the issue and suggest measures to bring parity in pensions of the past and future defence retirees, on a basic premise of natural justice, that no senior may be brought lower than his junior — a concept which is now understood as One Rank One Pension.The present government, in its pre-election gambit to woo ex-servicemen in 2013, promised to fulfill this long overdue and legitimate entitlement. However, in a display of bad faith, on November 7, 2015, the NDA government drove the last nail in the coffin by diluting and granting a falsely labeled OROP.Why OROP only for military retirees?Any organisation that has service conditions similar to that of the soldiers of the Defence Forces has a rightful case for OROP. The average soldier retires at young age of 35, just when his domestic responsibilities are waxing, and risks both his life and limbs as part of his duty and obligation to the nation. His fundamental rights are curtailed by the law, under sovereign guarantee that his needs will be cared for and therefore he has no institution to fall back to except the government. Unlike the police and every other organization in India, soldiers are prohibited from forming unions or associations to fight for justice. Not to mention the type of hard field service locations that he has to endure, and implications on his family, affecting financial life, and, looming early retirement. The latter is because the state requires a young and fit force, and because its pyramidal structure cannot absorb him, he is let go in the prime of his life. In a nutshell, OROP to the military retirees is meant basically to compensate for their mandatory early retirement.Why no OROP to other uniformed servicesRegarding no OROP to other uniformed services Central Armed Police Forces (CAPF) like BSF, CRPF, ITBPF etc, the answer is in the questionnaire: (a) Irrespective of their rank, they can serve up to 57 years unlike the military personal who are made to retire at 35 and upwards depending upon their rank. (b) The CAPF are assured minimum three promotions, but for defense forces, there is no such assurance. The service conditions of Defence Forces and CAPF too are different. The concept of “One Rank One Pension” was formulated after deliberations keeping all stakeholders in the loop. The concept was approved by two Parliaments, UPA- as well as NDA-led, but even after more than three years of the latter, it is yet to be implemented in its entirety.The government brazenly continues to deny the ex-servicemen (ESM) their due- their promised OROP, not realising that today’s soldier is tomorrow’s ESM and his morale is the nation’s biggest strength. It is neither statesmanship nor good governance and is not in the overall interest of the security of India. Why are faujis still protesting?If the NDA government loftily claims that OROP to military retirees has been granted, then why are faujis still protesting? It is because the government, in November 2015, arbitrarily altered the approved definition of OROP, equalised the pension of the past defense pensioners by giving them one time raise and maliciously termed it as OROP. The veterans felt let down at that sellout and decided to continue their peaceful protest from Jantar Mantar, asking the government for the approved and promised OROP in its entirety. Surely they are not foolish enough to continue to agitate if the actual OROP had been granted.The NDA government should well heed the warning: the defence fraternity of near five crore is a formidable electorate. Military veterans (many of them war-decorated), mostly in their twilight years, have been protesting peacefully from a footpath near Jantar Mantar for the past 28 months, asking the government to fulfill the promise of granting them correct OROP. The government continues to remain in denial mode. The exservicemen have no one to fall back to except their civilian brethren. Shouldn’t the people of the country sit up, lend their ears and peacefully be their voice too? For, didn’t these retired soldiers keep you all safe when they were young and in active service? 


Have Aadhaar? Book 12 Rly tickets a month online

New Delhi, November 3

The Railways has increased the monthly cap on tickets booked on the ICRTC portal from six to 12 for Aadhaar-verified passengers.The move, which came into effect on October 26, is believed to be an innovative way for the railways to encourage passengers to link their Aadhaar numbers to their online booking accounts on IRCTC. — PTI


Making arms in India Is the government missing the bus?

Making arms in India

IN yet another front-page news item on Tuesday, the country was informed about the government’s supposedly unrelenting drive to make defence equipment in India. We may revel over the dedication of the Kalams and the Natarajans to their craft, but the hard reality is that India remains bracketed with Saudi Arabia as the world’s leading importer of military hardware. Exhaustive reports by successive parliamentary committees have laid bare the cupboard of Indian R&D in military. Hence, the drive to somehow inveigle foreign defence manufacturers into setting up shop in India. The latest government initiative to promote domestic manufacturing of military hardware is to make the licences valid for lifetime and scrapping the system of renewal.This latest tweaking of rules is not a good advertisement for the government’s avowed intention of making the country a hub for defence manufacturing. A government with very little distractions that come from having a comfortable majority in the Lok Sabha should not be engaged in breaking down inter-ministerial silos in its third year in office. The same is the fate with making big ticket items like fighter planes, tanks and warships in the private sector. The musical chairs with the Defence Minister’s office contributed to delays in choosing companies that will partner global defence giants to make their equipment in India. But for a couple of exceptions, the “chosen” Indian partner is a novice in the complex field of defence manufacturing and may not encourage the foreign partner to test the waters for fear of being scalded.Inexplicably, the Modi government has dragged its feet on an overhaul of the existing public sector-heavy defence manufacturing industry. A company like Hindustan Aeronautics Limited should have been hived off into specialised units — helicopters, fighters, transporters, drones etc — and privatised. A foreign partner would have felt more comfortable joining hands with companies that have domain knowledge about defence manufacturing. The only success on the horizon is for making Russian helicopters in India. For the real high-end items, the government’s game plan of roping in friendly corporates with no past record of high-tech manufacturing will not yield quick results.


MAJ GEN SATBIR MUST LEARN FROM Gurdaspur Lok Sabha Elections , Message for Military Leadership?

medals

Its a high time Maj Gen Satbir to stop his Claim as  the only Messiah for OROP and State Govt King Maker during elections. He has forgotten that  majority of ESM from all over India Participated in the initial agitation to give it a concrete momentum along with contribution of  hard earned money  to make it a success but Maj Gen Satbir has no love lost for anyone except his own Balle Balle.  It was by default that Mr Natish became the CM of Bihar not any miracle done by Maj Gen Satbir Singh  as Claimed by him with his collar high.

He himself  w2as never  on a firm footing  to support which  Political Party.  A wavy mindset to chose AAP/BJP/Congress/Akali. Where does  he stand now with his Fauji Janta Party (FJP) as a creator and Patron of the same.  Where is he now for Gujarat and Himachal State elections and his followers. ESM came to  Jantar Mantar as all organisation of ESM big or small joined the agitation , and all weree efefcted ,its not Satbir Leadership or his personality which attracted ESM fro all over India . Maj Gen Satbir seeing donation coming in lakhs which  commutative in crores , he took the lead as usual and as per his personality traits and slowly and steady isolated himself from all other ESM organisations along with his ever green team and took over the central stage.

He has prolonged the agitation and stretched too far that non of the Govt agencies at any level including Top brass of Services  wants to discuss  any issue regarding OROP with him . He himself need to be blamed for his isolation and today he wants MahaRally of ESM  at Janatr Mantar on 29 Oct 2017.  Further he has damaged the cause of agitation by giving a  political angle to the whole agitation .He is now holding on to JM for sake of self pride as  he has no way to get out from Jantar Mantar Now, which will be his personal defeat..

In Punjab also he just came to Jallander in  Feb a month before elections  afyter his negotiations with APP and Akali’s failed he wanted to cash on Congress seeing the wave of public and ESM . At Rally and did not allow Capt Amarinder to speak to the ESM and convert the Jallander rally to Jantar Mantar  Slogans “ SADA HAQ ATHE RAKH”

The latest fiddle was his  support APP candidate of his equivalent rank during Gurdaspur By Elections, totally overlooking the fact that now ESM know s what he wants . He wants A Rajiya sabha Seat , which is the only point he gave to Capt Amaninder Singh else or other 12 points had been included in the Congress manifesto handed over by Sanjha Morcha and discussed at length during a meeting with S.Manpreet Badal ,Lt Gen TS Sher Gill,Lt Gen Jasbir Singh Dhaliwal,Maj Gen SPS Grewal, Brig JS Jaswal,Brig Indermohan Singh,Col Bhag Singh,Col Ranjit Singh Boparai and Col Charanjit Singh. The points he gave were the repetition of Points after knowing what points Sanjha Morcha has given from its  Gen Secy.

Political fall out from Gurdaspur Lok Sabha polls , BJP and AAP can burn the midnight oil to find out cause/s of their dismal performance.
 What concerns is the OUTRIGHT rejection of TWO STAR MILITARY OFFICER supported by Maj Gen Satbir,Col SS Sohi,Col MS Bajwa,Col Rangi ,Brig Harwant Singh, Brig KS Khalon, in a constituency having nearly quarter million military personnel and their families as eligible voters.
Gurdaspur Lok Sabha constituency comprises of following nine Vidhan Sabha constituencies:-
·         Batala
·         Bhoa
·         Dera Baba Nanak
·         Dina Nagar
·         Fatehgarh Churian
·         Gurdaspur
·         Pathankot
·         Qadian
·         Sujanpur
During  official visit to Gurdaspur to attend the ex servicemen rally in 2004,the  percentage of families had a person in Military in every  village.  One of the  ESM  said “Sahab ye poncho ki kis gharan mein FAUJI UNIFORM nahi tangi hai”.
Without getting into the digital storm by quoting figures, it would suffice to mention that ex-servicemen and serving population in this constituency could be as high as quarter million (2.5 lakh) in 2017.
It was around 1.98 lakh in 2004. Figures quoted should be viewed with around 10% deviation either way.
What is astonishing about the election results is the skewed manner of voting without bringing political affiliations into the picture. Political candidate Sunil Jakhar (I call him a political candidate because he is son of Late Balram Jakhar) received nearly 63% of the votes polled (0.51 mn out of 0.83mn), Businessman candidate Swaran Singh received 38% of the votes polled (0.31 mn out of 0.83 mn). Military candidate (a Two Star Officer) received a mere 2.7% votes (23,579 out of 0.83 mn, losing his deposit) in a constituency ‘INFESTED’ with ex-servicemen (mostly soldiers) and their family.
Military Leadership must look at the result seriously. 
Is it a vote of ‘NO TRUST’ in Military leadership by the Soldiers?  so is the Case of Maj Gen Satbir Singh agitation stands and his support to APP candidate Stood.  ,
Serving military officers, perhaps, need to take note. Does an outright rejection of a TWO STAR officer convey something? who lost without a  grace.. Earlier Gen JJ Singh tried his luck at Patiala and result was both have landed up as “JAMANT JABHAT” Is there a need for self introspection by Senior Military Leadership?
and
Maj Gen Satbir trying to call Maha Rally at Janatar Mantar on 29 Oct 2017 must look within  himself /introspection how many ESM will  join him. He  own his own have isolated from the major ESM community except ESM from Arty/Gunners. God bless him in his efforts as he has no welfare plan for ESM or their families nor he ever visited any of the Martyr Families of JCO’ and OR’s or announced any momentary help from the crores he received in donations at Jantar Mantar in Cash and by Cheque and from abroad transferred in personal accounts as alleged by ESM fro abroad.
  Still time for Maj Gen Satbir to leave the Janatr Mantr Gracefully , to safe Guard his balance credit-ability as he will not be able to regain his lost Glory anymore.
  Last but not the least he should think off how to get the medals back from the Govt, approx 25000, belonging to ESM from all over India, BUT he is the last man to do it, as he got what he wanted terms of collection of donations in Crores.

DISCONTENT IN INDIAN ARMED FORCES by by Air Marshal R. S. Bedi (retd)

A few decades ago a senior former bureaucrat wrote in his book that it was not possible for the Armed Forces to stage a coup in India. The argument was simply based on the fact that Indian society was a complex body comprising different castes, religions, languages and ethnicities.
No General, however popular, could be sure of the total loyalty and backing of so diverse a force as the Indian Armed Forces. He was perhaps right. Despite this, the fear in the corridors of power continued to persist, for many a fledgling democracy was falling prey to ambitions of men in uniform. There lay the genesis of the process of downsizing and subordinating the Indian Armed Forces.
At present, the state of affairs in the Armed Forces is somewhat disturbing.
• The cumulative effect of years of neglect of the Armed Forces has begun to manifest. Today’s soldier is educated, conscious of his status and standing. His aspirations are growing with the fast-changing environment around him. This, perhaps, is the main reason for repeated incidents of indiscipline in the Army.
• The men were never so verbose and openly daring as they are now in expressing their dissatisfaction. The palpable resentment of the mass of the Armed Forces against the government doesn’t augur well for the future.
Year after year, the Armed Forces have been given a raw deal. They are downgraded with regular periodicity and denuded of power due to them. Enough has been said about their dwindling status. Even the paramilitary forces seem to be overtaking them in many respects.
• The bureaucracy has tightened its grip to the extent that orders from the highest in the government establishment are either diluted or not implemented in proper spirit.
Realising deep discontent in the Armed Forces in regard to the Sixth Pay Commission award, the Prime Minister ordered a high-powered committee to look into the Armed Forces’ grievances. The bureaucracy got away with impunity without delivering. The problem continues to simmer. There is mounting discontentment over the government’s inability to set things right. The political leadership that should, in fact, be the epicentre of power is gradually becoming ineffective.
The retired community, less shackled with rules and regulations, is far more verbose and has even resorted to rallies and dharnas to express their dissatisfaction. They surrendered their hard-earned medals to their Commander-in-Chief to protest against the step-motherly treatment meted out to them. The president showed scant regard for this desperate act of the soldiers.
• Surprisingly, even the paramilitary forces are better placed and better looked after by their Home Ministry than the Armed Forces by their Defence Ministry. In the case of the latter, the Services first struggle with their own ministry to get past it to secure government approval for anything that it needs. The reason not generally known for the paramilitary forces to be under the Home Ministry instead of the Defence Ministry in itself assures them somewhat better treatment.
• They don’t have to fight with their own ministry as do the Armed Forces.
The Armed Forces are not in any major decision-making loop, not even in regard to national security.
This is when the country is on the verge of completing its nuclear triad and acquiring strategic weapons. Presently, no uniformed personnel serve in the Ministry of Defence despite the recommendations made by various committees in the past to make decision-making more informed and rational. Many a committee, including the one on Kargil, has made such recommendations but none has been implemented by the all-powerful bureaucracy.
It’s a pity that despite the highly specialised staff available at the Services headquarters, the political establishment relies totally on the (inept self-serving) Ministry of Defence civil servants drawn from diverse backgrounds. Since the Services have a limited access to the political establishment, they are unable to make any worthwhile contribution to matters of national importance. The Chiefs can hardly meet the Prime Minister. Meeting the Defence Minister is not a routine affair either.
The plight of the soldier has not moved the conscience of the government.
He is taken for granted and tasked to perform what his civilian compatriots prefer not to do or perhaps consider it too dangerous to stake their lives.
• He is killed almost every day which is just a matter of statistics for the government. Only his family sheds tears for they will have to struggle for the rest of their lives; first with the bureaucracy to get what is due to them and then try to subsist with growing responsibilities and scarce resources. His status and emoluments are perhaps among the lowest in the government hierarchy. Yet he does not come out in the streets to protest.
• But now the discontentment is no more confined to whispers. It is getting louder by the day. Questions are asked but unfortunately the answers are not forthcoming. How long will the mandarins in the North and South Blocks ignore the writing on the wall?
The military leadership has been sounding the government at various levels but to no avail. In a rare display of political magnanimity, the Defence Minister wrote to the Prime Minister a couple of months ago with an implicit warning in regard to the deteriorating state of affairs in the Armed Forces. The Prime Minister acted ‘promptly’ and asked the bureaucracy, the same people who are largely responsible for creating the mess, to look into it.
The bureaucrats, as is their wont, refused to include representatives from the Armed Forces whose problems they are supposed to resolve. Obviously, one doesn’t expect much from them in the absence of their voice being heard directly. In the end, some cosmetic changes will be brought about, but the problem will linger on.
TODAY’S INDIAN ARMY IS NO MORE THE SAME AS IT WAS A DECADE AGO. TO TAKE THEM FOR GRANTED WITHOUT RESPONDING TO THEIR GENUINE NEEDS WOULD BE A SERIOUS MISTAKE.
• They are no more reticent and subdued. At least, three cases have been reported in the recent past of revolts against officers. It may be the tip of the iceberg. In any case, it is a reflection of deteriorating standards and morale of men in uniform. Whatever be the reasons for dissatisfaction—pay, pension, food, facilities or status—once the intensity of feelings reaches the critical stage, the consequences may be serious.
The naval mutiny in 1946 was led by signalman M. S. Khan and Telegraphist Madan Singh as a strike in protest against the general conditions of service, inadequate facilities and poor quality of food. The revolt spread fast throughout British India from Karachi to Calcutta and ultimately came to involve nearly 20,000 sailors on 78 ships and 20 shore establishments.
So was the 1857 Mutiny inspired by an ordinary soldier called Pandey in Meerut that soon escalated into other mutinies and civilian rebellions.
The Indian Air Force too was gradually sucked in the naval strike. And so was the Indian Army. The NCOs defied the orders from their British superiors. In Madras and Poona, the British garrison faced a revolt in the ranks of the Indian Army. In fact, widespread rioting took place from Calcutta to Karachi.
Even the British Air Force revolted against the conditions of service in January 1946. The mutiny began in Karachi and spread to 60 RAF stations in India, Ceylon and Singapore. Lord Wavel, then Viceroy of India, stated that the action of the British airmen inspired both Indian Navy and Air Force mutinies. Revolts and rebellions are not necessarily led by the officer class; in fact, often by men whose only concern is their conditions of service and welfare.
• • Today the discontent is far more pronounced than ever before. Whether it is the lackadaisical attitude of the government or a wilful decision is hard to say.
BUT IT WOULD BE A GROSS MISTAKE TO IGNORE THE WRITING ON THE WALL AND THE LESSONS OF HISTORY SO SOON.
Courtesy:Facebook Post By Col.Mahip Chadha.

Re 1/minute satphone calls for armed forces

Re 1/minute satphone calls for armed forces
No rental will be charged from security forces from Thursday. Tribune file

New Delhi, October 18

Telecom Minister Manoj Sinha today said paramilitary and armed forces would be able to make calls to their families using satellite phone at Re 1 per minute from tomorrow.The current call rate for most such connections was Rs 5 per minute, although some subsidised ones cost Re 1. “On the eve of Diwali, we are announcing that armed forces and paramilitary forces stationed in remote areas and tough terrains on borders will be able to make satellite phone calls at Re 1 per minute. This will enable them to talk to their families for longer duration,” Sinha said.(Follow The Tribune on Facebook; and Twitter @thetribunechd)The minister also announced that no rental would be charged from security forces from tomorrow. “At present, Rs 500 monthly rent is charged for satellite phone connections,” he said.Satellite phone service was earlier being provided by Tata Communications, but now it would be provided by the state-run telecom firm BSNL. The call charge was Re 1 in 2009-10 to begin with, to be revised every five years.At present, there are 2,500 satellite phone connections operational in the country. “We have a capacity of 5,000. We are informing the defence and home ministries that more connections can be given,” Sinha said. — PTI


Navy inducts its newest anti­submarine warship

SHINING ARMOUR INS Kiltan to strengthen force’s ability to detect, target hostile vessels

NEW DELHI: The Indian Navy inducted its newest anti-submarine warfare (ASW) corvette on Monday, boosting the force’s capability to detect and target hostile vessels and to provide protection to Indian warships.

Defence minister Nirmala Sitharaman commissioned the indigenously built INS Kiltan into the navy at the Naval Dockyard at Visakhapatnam in the presence of navy chief Admiral Sunil Lanba.

“INS Kiltan strengthens our defence system and will be a shining armour in our ‘Make in India’ programme as it is totally built here,” Sitharaman said on the occasion.

Kiltan is the latest indigenous warship after Shivalik class, Kolkata class and sister ships INS Kamorta and INS Kadmatt to have joined the Indian Navy’s arsenal wherein a plethora of weapons and sensors have been integrated to provide a Common Operational Picture (COP), an official release said.

It is the navy’s first major warship to have a superstructure of carbon fibre composite material imported from Sweden, resulting in improved stealth features and lower weight and maintenance costs. INS Kiltan is 100 tonnes lighter than the previous corvettes.

INS Kiltan is also the first major warship to have undertaken sea trials of all major weapons and sensors as a pilot project prior to delivery by the shipyard to Indian Navy. It is ready to be operationally deployed.

The ship, measuring 109 meters long and 14 meters at the beam, is propelled by four diesel engines to achieve speeds in excess of 25 knots and has an endurance of around 3,500 nautical miles.

INS Kiltan’s weapons include heavy weight torpedoes, ASW rockets, 76 mm caliber medium range gun and two multi-barrel 30 mm guns.

The ship gets its name from an island in the strategically located Lakshadweep and Minicoy islands.

(With agency inputs)


Supporting Modi was a mistake: Arun Shourie

KASAULI: Former BJP minister Arun Shourie hit out at Prime Minister Narendra Modi saying supporting him was a mistake.

Delivering the inaugural address of the sixth edition of the Khushwant Singh literary festival at Kasauli on Friday, Shourie said, “I made too many mistakes — by supporting (former PM) VP Singh and then by supporting Modi.” Shourie, the minister for communications and information technology from 2002-04, was speaking on ‘How to recognise rulers for what they are’. “Don’t believe that leaders will suddenly change when they come to power. Judge character with the adherence to truth. Is he (the leader) a man of his words?” he said.

Shourie is the latest senior politician to speak out against the NDA government over its economic policies, sliding growth rate and unemployment. Last week, senior BJP leader Yashwant Sinha had criticised the government for making a “mess” of the economy. Sinha was finance minister in the Atal Bihari Vajpayee cabinet. The BJP responded by dismissing Sinha and Shourie as frustrated politicians. On leaders of today, Shourie said, “Just believe I’m talking about Donald Trump. Any resemblance closer home is your imagination.”

“The leaders of today are Machiavellian and narcissistic. After demonetisation, leaders started victimising themselves, saying they had to go through so much after demonetisation),” he said. Shourie also expressed disappointment over the current state of the media. “See what has happened to the media, nobody is telling them the truth. The media will have to devise other methods to realise the truth,” said the Jalandhar-born former editor who was awarded the Ramon Magsaysay Award in journalism, literature and creative communication arts in 1982.

FESTIVE START

With a heady mix of film personalities, journalists, and writers, literature lovers are in for a treat at the annual lit fest, which pays homage to late author Khushwant Singh’s brand of humour and irreverence got off to a lively start. This year, the theme is simply ‘70’, which celebrates 70 years of Independence.


HEADLINES PRINT MEDIA DEF RELATED NEWS::01 OCT 2017

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CAPT AMARINDER CELEBRATES VIJAY DASHI WITH ESM AT PATHANKOT

CM vows to help students of Salaria’s medical college

हिमालयन रेंज में मौजूद सियाचिन ग्लेशियर दुनिया का सबसे ऊंचा बैटल फील्ड है। यहां से एक चीन-पाकिस्तान पर नजर रखी जाती है।

BSF DETECTS 14-FOOT TUNNEL NEAR BORDER IN ARNIA SECTOR

LOC के पास मिली 14 फीट की सुरंग, हथियार और खाने-पीने का सामान बरामद

RAJNATH CELEBRATES VIJAY DASHMI WITH ITBP JAWANS

NIRMALA INAUGURATES KEY BRIDGE IN LEH PRATHAM-SHYOK BRIDGE WILL CONNECT THE REGION TO KARAKORAM IN NORTH-EASTERN LADAKH

PAKISTAN ARMY SAYS 3 PEOPLE KILLED IN FIRING BY INDIAN TROOPS

JOSHI AT HELM AS ANDAMAN TRANSFORMS INTO MAJOR BASE

NEW GOVERNORS IN 5 STATES ADMIRAL JOSHI ANDAMAN L-G; PUROHIT ON CHENNAI POST

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Colonel denied bail in road rage case

Tribune News Service

Chandigarh, September 28

A local court today dismissed the bail plea of Col Manveer Bains, accused of murder in an incident of road rage. The court observed that Colonel Bains had committed a serious offence and that “he knew the consequences of his actions”. Colonel Bains has been accused of murdering Sector 37 resident Praveen Yadav.The bail application claimed that Yadav died of natural causes and was supported by a medical report from doctors of the GMCH, Sector 32.However, the prosecution opposed it saying that the CFSL and the histopathology reports were awaited. The results of these reports could be vital as these may suggest the chronological order of events and the exact cause of the death. These may also suggest what chemical reactions in the deceased’s body led to his “natural death”.According to the order, Colonel Bains might have been angry with the resident and he parked his car in front of Yadav’s. Colonel Bains slapped Yadav who was brought dead, indicating that he died on the spot. The Judge thus dismissed the bail plea of the Colonel. His application for class B facilities in jail will be taken up on Friday. The 48-year-old Mohali resident was arrested on September 2 and booked for murder after the family of Praveen Yadav alleged that he had been “beaten to death”.