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India can now quickly build bigger jets, says DRDO chief

India can now quickly build bigger jets, says DRDO chief

India can now quickly build bigger jets

Ajay Banerjee

Tribune News Service

Bengaluru, February 23

After the final operational clearance (FOC) of Light Combat Aircraft Tejas, India is now looking at a rapid multi-pronged effort to build the next class of fighter jets having more powerful engines and potent weaponry.

Dr G Satheesh Reddy, who is Secretary, Defence Research and Development, and also Chairman of DRDO, said, “The FOC for Tejas is a landmark for the country. From here on, we can produce faster (jets).”  The design for the Medium Weight Fighter (MWF) is ready. The prototype will be ready by 2021-end,” the senior defence scientist added.

The Tejas weighs 6.5 tonnes and the MWF is the next class and targeted to weigh around 17 tonnes. The Aeronautical Development Agency and the Indian Air Force (IAF) have designed it as per the requirement of the IAF. It will have an engine of 98 Kilonewton (Kn) thrust.

Also, India is looking to take a technological leap. The DRDO is now in talks with an international partner to make a jet engine of 110 Kn power. So far, no such engine exists anywhere in the world.  “We are open to working on this and are in talks with partners for joint development,” said Dr Reddy, adding this engine could be used on future jets.

On being asked about the Kaveri engine, Dr Reddy said it would be used on UAVs. “It is not being shelved.” Notably, Kaveri’s thrust is about 75 Kn and 90 Kn is desired to power a fighter jet.

The Ministry of Defence has already informed Parliament about the technological difficulties of engine-making, including non-availability of raw material/critical components and skilled manpower.

On the much-debated construction timeline for the variants of Tejas, Dr Reddy, who took over as DRDO Chairman in August last year, said the first 20 of the Initial Operational Clearance (IOC) version will be ending very soon. The production of 20 jets under the FOC version would start this year and would be done in two years. We are waiting for the IAF to place an order for 83 jets of the Mark 1A version.

On the engine of the Arjun tank, so far imported from MTU Germany, Dr Reddy said, “A new engine is being developed and will be tested.”

 


Army help sought for cut-off Pangi villages

Army help sought for cut-off Pangi villages

The snow-covered Tissa valley in Chamba district.

Tribune News Service
Dharamsala, February 20

The district administration, Chamba, has sought the help of the Army to supply essential items to Pangi villages. All routes to the villages have been cut off for the past few days due to an avalanche.

Chamba DC Harikesh Meena said there had been heavy snow and avalanches in many areas of Pangi and Bharmour. Due to that,certain villages had been cut off.

“We requested the Army to provide food and necessary medication to such villages. Since there was heavy snow today also, the aid could not be provided to the cut-off villages. We will make efforts with the help of the Army when the weather improves,” he said.

The Pangi valley is a remote, rugged and poorly developed tribal area of Chamba district. It is one of the most remote areas in the state. The valley comprises Saichu, Hudan Bhatori and Sural Bhatori valleys. Roads conditions are poor. In winters, the valley remains cut off due to heavy snow.

The Saach Pass at an altitude of 14,500 feet (4,400 m) is open to the traffic between mid-June and October, but closed due to heavy snow.

Pangi tehsil covers 1,601 square kilometres and had a population of about 20,000. The valley has 16 panchayats and 54 villages. The valley is mostly inhabited by Pangwala and Bhoti people.

Bharmour MLA trapped for five days

Bharmour MLA Jia Lal has been trapped in the Killar area of the Pangi valley for the past five days. Sources said he was trying to come out from the Doda area of Jammu and Kashmir.

 


SC to consider pleas against Rafale verdict

SC to consider pleas against Rafale verdict

A French Rafale fighter aircraft. AFP

New Delhi, February 21

The Supreme Court today said it would consider hearing petitions seeking review of its verdict dismissing petitions demanding a probe into alleged irregularities in procurement of 36 Rafale fighter jets from France under an inter-governmental agreement (IGA).

In a relief to the Modi government, the top court had on December 14 dismissed petitions seeking probe into India-France deal for procurement of 36 Rafale fighter jets — a twin-engine Medium Multi Role Combat Aircraft (MMRCA) manufactured by French aerospace company Dassault Aviation — holding there was no commercial favouritism. There was no occasion to “really doubt the decision making process” warranting setting aside of the contract, it had said.

Lawyer Prashant Bhushan today requested a Bench headed by Chief Justice Ranjan Gogoi to consider the submission that his review petition and an application seeking perjury prosecution of some government officials for “misleading” the court during earlier hearings be listed urgently.

Bhushan said the review petition filed by AAP leader Sanjay Singh was defective and the defect had to be cured and so far as other pleas were concerned, they could be listed for the hearing. Besides former Union ministers Yashwant Sinha and Arun Shourie, and Bhushan, advocates ML Sharma and Vineet Dhanda and AAP leader Sanjay Singh had also filed pleas challenging the Rafale deal.  — TNS

 


Pulwama attack signals return of deadly IED threat, suicide bombing in Kashmir; unfair to blame intelligence failure alone by Ltb Gen Ata Hasnain

It is ironical that a day after the National Security Guard (NSG) conducted its national seminar focused on improvised explosive devices (IEDs) and the very day the Indian Army was discussing sub-conventional operations in an Army-level seminar, both in the National Capital Region, a major car bomb attack killed as many as 40 CRPF personnel travelling in a bus on the Srinagar–Jammu National Highway in Pulwama. Proportion wise this is the biggest terror-related event in Jammu and Kashmir since the Uri attack of 18 September, 2016 and probably one of the worst losses in the 30-year-proxy war in Jammu and Kashmir.

The attack comes in the wake of a festering situation described by some as ‘security stable’ and many others as ‘dynamic – awaiting the next event’. I place myself in the latter category, since for over two years I have feared the return of the IED threat to Kashmir and been writing about it. Even more than that, I have feared the advent of suicide bombing as part of the emerging threats. More on this later but suffice to say for now that suicide bombers have been rife in Syria, Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan for past many years. This is one domain of sub-conventional violence which had largely eluded Kashmir and all such low intensity conflict theatres in rest of India.

Security personnel carry out rescue and relief works at the site of suicide bomb attack at Lathepora Awantipora in Pulwama district of south Kashmir on Thursday. PTI

The geographical location of the incident was the notorious Pampore-Letapur section of the Srinagar-Jammu highway. It was a vehicle laden with 350 kgs of explosives which detonated after ramming against the CRPF bus transporting CRPF jawans in large numbers as part of a convoy; mostly personnel stuck in transit camps due to the closure of the highway due to heavy snow. Apparently some indiscriminate firing by other terrorists also added to the casualty figures. It won’t take long establishing the facts. Already the name of the suicide bomber is known; Adil Ahmad Dar of Masood Azhar’s Jaish-e-Mohammad (JeM). The fact that the name is Kashmiri is all the more disturbing. Kashmiri ‘fidayeen’ have been rare but this incident may just spur more towards such a trend.

It is easy to blame this incident on lapse in security and insufficient vigil on the road when the CRPF convoy was due to pass. For the past few months, the Pampore segment of the highway has been relatively incident free compared to 2017 when a series of ambushes on several convoys claimed several lives of soldiers and policemen. In counter-terror operations often a certain domain of activity takes primacy; it could be targetting of policemen on leave or on duty, rocket attacks or standoff firing on posts and attempted entry into security posts by so called ‘fidayeen’ who are prepared to die in the course of their actions.

There are many such terrorist actions and the selected choice always remains in the hands of the terrorists which therefore gives them the initiative. Security forces have the major challenge of predicting these through intelligence-based assessment. Sometimes they are right and many times inaccurate. However, while an emplaced IED can still be discovered by alert security personnel on road opening duties, the threat posed by a car bomb or simply a wired up single suicide bomber is vastly different. Check of every car on the road is never possible nor of all individuals; there are thousands of cars on Kashmir’s roads every day and particularly on this stretch of the National Highway, being closer to Srinagar.

While the media is being critical of the security for movement of convoys it is entirely unfair to blame intelligence agencies or the police. When a trend takes course, such as that of IEDs or car bombs the alert is of a focused kind. Currently there was a threat but not something which could give leads for any substantial intelligence work.

At the same time it is not easy for terrorists or over ground workers (OGWs) to prepare and emplace an IED or fabricate a car bomb if the intelligence is hands on and the area domination is effective. Almost 16 years devoid of any car bombs had diverted attention to other types of threats.

Prediction that this trend could return was made by many experienced hands after analysing the security environment in other affected countries but accuracy and assessment of timing and nature of attack would always be questionable. That is why blame game in such situations is strictly avoidable. Where the blame must be genuinely apportioned is in the non-availability of hardened vehicles for movement of personnel.

A massive effort was undertaken in 2004-07 to harden such buses to minimise damage to personnel in the event of an IED related attack. Obviously replacements have been far and few and budget constraints have probably come in the way. The army, too, remains vulnerable on this count. It’s good for the people and the leadership to know that in 2004 an army bus hardened with skirt plates of vintage tanks suffered such a car bomb attack; except for the driver whose cabin was unhardened all others survived with minor injuries. That car, too, was driven by a Kashmiri local just as the one which rammed Badami Bagh’s Batwara Gate in 2001.

The likely effect of Thursday’s dastardly attack will be of an immediate change in the nature of threats. Obviously one or more ‘IED doctors’ are at work in the terrorist ranks and explosives are not under any form of government control. Movement of VIPs, security convoys and even entry points of important institutions will immediately come under threat entailing much higher density of deployment for physical security. This will take away personnel from domination duties and intelligence-related deployment thus opening up more space for terrorist movement deployment and capability.

There will be an immediate necessity for greater population control measures and curbs on freedom of movement with many more checkpoints leading to more antipathy among the people. The cause is due to the terrorists but the blame will come on the security forces and the vicious cycle will continue exactly as intended by the sponsors of the proxy war in Pakistan. These are the typical travails of a sub conventional conflict and the sponsors know exactly how a failing situation can be retracted for effect by a big ticket event.

With what is happening in Afghanistan and the emerging advantage that is like to accrue to Pakistan in terms of enhanced importance in the eyes of major powers, there is likelihood that its risk taking propensity in Kashmir will increase. Thus the first of the steps that India needs to take is to enhance its diplomatic energy in major capitals and institutions of the world. Public opinion will be coloured by sentiment but it really is the time that the Indian leadership will have to relook at the entire strategy India has thus far played out. India cannot afford to be seen to be helpless but options are extremely limited and therein lies our 30 year old dilemma.

It is also important to ensure that vilification of the ordinary Kashmiri is not done. We already have a seething youth on our hands and alienating just about everyone is not going to be helpful. It calls for statesmanship of the highest order. Will India’s political community rise to the occasion?

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India moves to isolate Pakistan

RETALIATION Officials prepare dossier on Islamabad’s terror funding, restrict medical visas to Pak citizens

From page 01 NEWDELHI: Dossiers for global circulation on Islamabad’s role in the Pulwama attack, tighter visa rules for Pakistani citizens coming to India for medical treatment, and a 200% increase in duties on goods imported from the country are part of New Delhi’s plans to tighten the screws on its neighbour over Thursday’s terror attack that left 40 Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) personnel dead.

HT FILE■ The government is planning to tighten medical visa requirements for security reasons.The customs duty increase was announced by Union finance minister Arun Jaitley on Saturday as foreign secretary Vijay Gokhale and secretaries of the external affairs ministry held meetings with several envoys, including ambassadors from the Association of Southeast Nations, the Gulf Cooperation Council and Central Asian and African nations.

India launched a diplomatic offensive against Pakistan on Friday, a day after the Pulwama attack, when Gokhale met 25 heads of missions, including the P5 or five permanent members of the UN Security Council — the United States, the United Kingdom, China, Russia and France — besides South Asian countries and key partners such as Israel, Japan and South Korea.

Also on Friday, India withdrew the Most Favoured Nation (MFN) status it gave to Pakistan in 1996, which offered the neighbour a guarantee that it wouldn’t be treated any differently from other trade partners of India. “Upon withdrawal (of MFN), basic customs duty on all goods exported from Pakistan to India has been raised to 200% with immediate effect,” finance minister Arun Jaitley wrote on Twitter on Saturday.

Orders to remove security detail of “separatist leaders” have also been issued by the government. “Only a few have security cover, it will be removed in comings days,” a senior officer who did not want to be named said.

The government’s tighter medical visa rules is for security reasons, two officials aware of the developments said. The curbs on medical visas is likely to end Pakistanis’ access to cheap and quality medical facilities in India. An immediate option is to demand additional documents, including an endorsement by Pakistan’s foreign ministry, to ensure only genuine patients can enter India for medical treatment, one of the officials quoted earlier, said.

At present, cases of organ transplants, particularly liver and kidney, require authentication by Pakistan’s foreign ministry. The purpose is to ensure that an organ donor is donating his or her organ voluntarily, the official said. Dr Sanjeev Bagai, chairman, Nephron Clinic, said medical visa norms for patients from Pakistan were tightened after the September 2016 attack on an Army brigade headquarters in Uri. Now, they are expected to be blocked completely.

“Patients from Pakistan prefer India because of better clinical results at one-tenth the cost (in developed countries). India is nearer, there is no language barrier, currency availability is not an issue and they get better follow-up services,” he said.

Indian defence experts said it was necessary to immediately suspend all kinds of visas so that ordinary citizens pressure Islamabad to stop protecting terrorists on its soil. “Visas on all possible grounds — family, medical, trade, etc. — must be stopped for a reasonable period to enable Pakistan’s ordinary citizens to realize what their state has been up to,” said Deba Mohanty, a New Delhi-based defence and strategic affairs expert.

In 2015-16, about 1,921 medical visas were issued to Pakistani nationals, 58,360 to patients from Bangladesh and 29,492 to those from Afghanistan

The dossier that New Delhi is putting together will contain evidence of Pakistani involvement not only in the Pulwama attack, where the Jaish-e-Mohammad has claimed responsibility, but also in training, equipping and guiding terror groups in Jammu and Kashmir and even in mainland India, officials said.

The Cabinet Committee on Security – the highest decisionmaking body on security, chaired by the Prime Minister and comprising the defence, home and external affairs ministers – met on Friday and decided to launch a massive diplomatic effort to isolate Pakistan. In their Saturday meetings, Gokhale and the other secretaries rejected Pakistan’s denial of involvement and highlighted its role in “using terrorism as an instrument of its state policy”, said an official familiar with the development. Reacting to Pakistan foreign secretary Tehmina Janjua’s remarks denying involvement in the attack, external affairs ministry spokesperson Raveesh Kumar described Islamabad’s call for an investigation into the strike as “preposterous”.

“Jaish-e-Mohammed has claimed responsibility for the attack. The organisation and its leadership are located in Pakistan. Lashkar-e-Taiba and other terror groups have welcomed the news of the attack. These groups are also based in Pakistan. Pakistan cannot claim it is unaware of their presence and their activities,” Kumar said.

Also on Saturday, Iran expressed its support after a meeting with foreign minister Sushma Swaraj. “Iran & India suffered from two heinous terrorist attacks in the past few days resulted in big casualties. Today in my meeting with Sushma Swaraj the Indian FM, when she had a stopover in Tehran, we agreed on close cooperation to combat terrorism in the region. Enough is enough!” tweeted Seyed Abbas Araghchi, the Iranian foreign minister.

Notably, after the 2008 Mumbai terror attacks when 10 Pakistan-based terrorists took the sea route to attack India’s financial capital and killed 166 people, New Delhi had sent nearly a dozen dossiers, including the DNA samples of the terrorists, to Islamabad with a demand that Pakistan investigates and book those behind the attack. And earlier, India had given evidence of Pakistan’s role in supporting terror groups to the international community.

Pakistan hasn’t acted against these groups despite international demands, “especially groups and individuals proscribed by the UN and other countries”, Kumar said. “The links to Pakistan are clear and evident for all to see. Its own ministers have shared the same podium with UN-proscribed terrorists,” he added. As the suicide bomber had issued a video declaring himself a member of JeM, India has “no doubt that the claim is firmly established”, he said.


External factors succeeded in shutting down core Army intelligence ops

New Delhi: At least 10 covert operations outside India were carried out by a tiny specialised unit of the Indian Army, the Technical Service Division (TSD), which was formed in May 2010 after General V.K. Singh took over as Chief of Army Staff. These included operations that prevented 26/11 Mumbai-type attacks of 2008 from taking place. However, once Gen Singh retired in May 2012, the TSD was disbanded after being portrayed as “rogue” by several media reports that were based on so-called information leaked allegedly from the laptops and pen-drives of serving Army officers. There was intelligence that external forces inimical to India’s interests were attempting the shutting down of this unit, according to Gen Singh.

Gen V.K. Singh, who is now a Minister of State in the NDA government, had pointed out in a letter to the then UPA Ministry of Home Affairs in 2013 that the winding up of the TSD had resulted in the Army being “left with no covert operation and weak counter-insurgency capacity”, thus resulting in an increase in cross-border terrorism.

Though the details regarding what the division achieved in less than 24 months of its existence was never made public, sources who were familiar with its working revealed that the details of its operations, if made public, would wash away the ignominy of it being a “rogue” unit, which was tagged to it in the last few months of its existence.

The TSD was engaged in carrying out covert operations outside India which involved gathering intelligence based on technical and human intervention, acting on those intelligence inputs and taking pre-emptive measures and conducting strikes of retribution against the entities that were engaged in anti-India operations.

The unit was brought into existence after the failure on the part of the agencies to get advance intelligence on the 26/11 Mumbai attack.

A section within the Army leadership, encouraged by the office of the National Security Advisor, felt that the Army too should have the capability to carry out limited, covert strikes outside the country to prevent any such further attacks.

The unit, when it was functioning to its full capacity, comprised at least six officers, five JCOs and 30 men who were working from a two-storied building in the Delhi Cantonment area and was reporting directly to Gen V.K. Singh.

When The Sunday Guardian contacted some of the officers who were a part of the division or played a part in its formation, they were not ready to disclose any information about the unit.

After his retirement, on 13 November 2013, Gen Singh wrote a letter to then Union Home Minister Sushil Kumar Shinde seeking action against government servants, defence officials and some private individuals for leaking information about the existence of the division and maligning it, which ultimately led to it being disbanded.

The letter reads: “The Indian Army had a unit called the Technical Service Division (TSD). It was set up to accomplish covert operations in other countries. It was a very important wing because it was the only unit which could perform this task. Given the nature of the work, the whole unit worked in a secretive and ‘camouflaged manner’. TSD is a covert operation agency, activities of which are directly related to the safety of the soldiers fighting on the borders, retribution on the enemy and the security of the citizens. By its very nature TSD operation was ‘top secret’. In that event, even the existence of TSD should never have been publicised. Further, if there is exposure of the actual working of the top-secret unit, leaking information about it could be treacherous, regardless of whether information is true or not.”

Yet, information about it was leaked to the media, which went to town painting it as a “rogue” agency riddled with “irregularities”.

Gen Singh also mentioned in the same letter that “there was an intelligence report which clearly warned that a few anti-national elements are conspiring to defame TSD by leveling false allegations and giving wide media coverage on the issue as the name of the unit has already been tarnished on several occasions. As a consequence of these acts prejudicial to the defence of India and the security of the State, TSD has been wound up and Indian Army is left with no covert operation and weak counter-insurgency capacity.”

“It is widely believed that if TSD had not wound up, the recent Samba attack by Pakistan-based elements (wherein several soldiers including a Lt. Col. were killed) could have been avoided. There is also widespread belief among senior Army officers that the scrapping of the TSD is a major reason why there has been a spurt in cross-border intrusions over the past year leading to the death of several soldiers and civilians,” Gen Singh had added in the letter.

When approached by this newspaper to confirm whether he had received the letter and if any action was taken on the basis of it, Shinde sounded evasive. “I don’t know… I don’t know. If at all he had any complaint, he should have come personally and met me at that time,” he said, adding that he later saw the letter. However, he ended the conversation commenting that “No General can write to the Minister in that language in which the letter was written.”


Sudhir Walia — a braveheart who went beyond the call of duty

Awarded Ashok Chakra, highest peace-time military decoration, posthumously

Col Dilbag Dabas (Retd)

Himachali soil has nurtured men of steel. Not just three Param Virs, the state has given to the Indian Army three bravest of the braves, who earned for themselves the coveted Ashok Chakra, the highest peace-time gallantry award.

Major Sudhir Kumar Walia is one such gem, which will glitter in Himachali crown till eternity.

Major Sudhir Kumar Walia, son of Subedar Major Rulia Ram Walia, was born on May 24, 1971, at Panuri village in Kangra district of Himachal Pradesh. Sudhir grew up listening about the valour of Indian soldiers from his father and knew that he was destined to be one. Even his father encouraged him to join the Indian military, which for the Himachalis is not just another career option, but a way of life, an honourable way of serving the motherland. An alumnus of Sainik School Sujanpur Tihra and the National Defense Academy, Khadakvasla (Pune), he was the first boy from his village to become an Army officer. After his military training at the prestigious Indian Military Academy, Dehradun, he was commissioned into the Jat Regiment. As a subaltern, Sudhir was a part of Indian Peace Keeping Force (IPKF), where he had an impressive record of fighting and neutralising Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) in Sri Lanka in the late ’80s. Sudhir also demonstrated his raw courage and Himachali grit during his two tenures in Jammu and Kashmir fighting exported as well as home-grown militants. His gallantry in neutralising and eliminating terrorists in the Kashmir valley did not go unnoticed and for his conspicuous acts of bravery in the face of the enemy, Sudhir was awarded the Sena Medal for gallantry twice.

The Parachute Regiment (Special Forces), always on the lookout for the daredevils, noticed all the attributes of a Para Commando in Sudhir Kumar Walia and took no time in getting him on its establishment. After three months of probation and five mandatory parachute jumps, Sudhir was permanently seconded to 9 Parachute Regiment (Special Forces). During his outstanding military career spanning just about a decade, what Major Sudhir Kumar Walia achieved is exceptional and rare. 

Kupwara district in Jammu and Kashmir has been and still is a hot bed of militancy in the Kashmir valley. The 9 Parachute Battalion (Special Forces) was deployed in Kupwara in 1999 for anti-terrorist operations. On August 29, 1999, Major Sudhir Kumar Walia was tasked to lead a squad of five commandos on “Search and destroy” mission through the dense undergrowth of Haphruda forest. His squad chanced upon a well-camouflaged hideout with 20 terrorists hiding in it. With total disregard to personal safety, Major Walia surged ahead of his squad and with the lightening speed not only neutralised the sentries, but also single-handedly killed four militants. In the cross fire, he, too, was hit in the face, arm and chest.

In spite of grave injuries, which were to prove fatal later, the gallant officer kept directing his men with his radio set and ultimately ensured that all terrorists were eliminated. Due to his fatal injuries and excessive loss of blood, Major Sudhir Kumar Walia breathed his last holding on to his radio set. This gallant officer went way beyond the call of duty and in the highest traditions of the Indian Army sacrificed his life for the country. For his most conspicuous act of bravery and supreme sacrifice in the face of the enemy, Major Sudhir Kumar Walia was awarded the Ashok Chakra, the highest peace-time military decoration, posthumously.

Major Sudhir Kumar Walia, AC, may be dead, but he still lives in the hearts and minds of not only the Himachalis, but all countrymen.

Highest peacetime military decoration in India

Ashok Chakra is the highest peacetime military decoration in India and equivalent to the Param Vir Chakra during war time. It is awarded for the most conspicuous act of bravery or some act of daring or pre-eminent valour or self-sacrifice other than in the face of the enemy on land, at sea or in the air. Ashok Chakra was instituted by the President of India on January 4, 1952.

Single-handedly killed four militants

The 9 Parachute Battalion (Special Forces) was deployed in Kupwara in 1999 for anti-terrorist operations. On August 29, 1999, Major Sudhir Kumar Walia was tasked to lead a squad of five commandos on “Search and destroy” mission through the dense undergrowth of Haphruda forest. His squad chanced upon a well-camouflaged hideout with 20 terrorists hiding in it. With total disregard to personal safety, Major Walia surged ahead of his squad and with the lightening speed not only neutralised the sentries, but also single-handedly killed four militants. In the cross fire, he, too, was hit in the face, arm and chest. In spite of grave injuries, which were to prove fatal later, the gallant officer kept directing his men with his radio set and ultimately ensured that all terrorists were eliminated. Due to his fatal injuries and excessive loss of blood, Major Sudhir Kumar Walia breathed his last holding on to his radio set. This gallant officer went way beyond the call of duty and in the highest traditions of the Indian Army sacrificed his life for the country. For his most conspicuous act of bravery and supreme sacrifice in the face of the enemy, Major Sudhir Kumar Walia was awarded the Ashok Chakra, the highest peace-time military decoration, posthumously.

(The writer is a veteran Gunner, 6 Field Regiment)


Govt allows agencies to monitor computers, sparks privacy fears

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

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

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

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


State to showcase tableau on Jallianwala Bagh massacre

State to showcase tableau on Jallianwala Bagh massacre

The trailer portion of the tableau will depict the scene when Gen Reginald Dyer had ordered firing on innocent people gathered at Jallianwala Bagh. File photo

GS Paul

Tribune News Service

Amritsar, January 25

Dedicated to the ensuing centenary of Jallianwala Bagh massacre, a special tableau will feature on the 70th Republic Day at Rajpath, New Delhi.

It is for the third time that a presentation from Punjab has found a place in the ceremony. An official said in 2017, it was ‘jaago tradition’, followed by ‘sangat te pangat’ in 2018. “Fortunately, this time among the 16 states and union territories participating in the highly patriotic parade at Rajpath, Punjab will be represented with the evocative presentation on the 100th year of Jallianwala Bagh massacre,” he said.

It is learnt that the trailer portion of the tableau will depict the scene when Gen Reginald Dyer had ordered firing on innocent people gathered at Jallianwala Bagh. Another portion will display a replica of the memorial built to commemorate the sacrifice of the martyrs.

A separate section has been built to showcase the ‘martyrs well’. The grille-mesh-covered well stands as a proof to the brutal killings on April 13, 1919, when hundreds of innocents had jumped into it in panic during the firing. As per records, 120 bodies were recovered from the well.

The Union government has also planned year-long celebrations to observe the massacre’s 100th year. Rajya Sabha MP Shwait Malik, who is also a trustee of the Jallianwala Bagh National Memorial Trust, said a special package had been spared by Prime Minister Narendra Modi to spruce up the historic place.

Malik said the development plan was on the tendering stage and the work would be started soon.

“It is probably for the first time that Jallianwala Bagh theme has been introduced in the parade. The Union government too has proposed to introduce coins and postal stamps to inculcate a feel of patriotism during the centenary celebrations. Another proposal is to introduce programmes like 7-D documentary depicting the massacre and its real-time feel through a light and sound show at the site.

Kanwar complains of breach of protocol

  • Chandigarh: Kharar MLA Kanwar Sandhu has complained of the breach of protocol regarding the members of the Punjab Legislative Assembly (MLAs) at the flag-hoisting ceremonies organised by the state government on the occasion of Republic Day on Saturday.
  • In a letter to Chief Minister Capt Amarinder Singh, Kanwar Sandhu stated that the elected members of the Punjab Legislative Assembly (MLAs) continue to be ignored and overlooked during the celebrations of Republic Day, Independence Day and other such official functions.
  • He said he had also made a reference to this during his earlier letter to the CM, dated December 10, 2018, on the role and responsibility of MLAs. TNS

 


GSAT-7A to extend Army, Air Force’s reach Will help inter-link ground radar stations, provide real-time pictures of areas not within range

GSAT-7A to extend Army, Air Force’s reach

Tribune News Service

New Delhi, December 19

In a development that will provide greater reach to the Indian Air Force and the Army, the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) today launched a military communication satellite, the second one since Rukmini — GSAT-7 — was launched in September 2013.

Besides these two, there are a dozen other satellites that are doing surveillance and sending only pictures and videos.

GSAT-7A will be for the use of Indian Air Force (IAF) and partially for the Army. A communication satellite enables live feed and can connect aircraft flying hundreds of miles away.

The Rukmini is for the use of the Navy and it scans the Arabian sea, the Bay of Bengal and also the strategic choke points like the Straits of Malacca. The GSAT-7A will enable the IAF to interlink different ground radar stations, ground airbase and airborne early warning and control (AWACS) aircraft.

The satellite will also help satellite-control the military unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) of the IAF even as the Army (that still awaits its own satellite called the GSAT-7B) will be using 30 per cent of GSAT-7A.

Operating a UAV is a challenge beyond a certain range. It is possible to control and also relay visuals using a satellite. It will provide communication capability to users in Ku-band over the Indian region, the space agency said.After the successful launch of the satellite meant for the IAF, Air Chief Marshal BS Dhanoa said the launch would enhance the networking and communication capabilities of the Air Force.

The GSAT 7-A will extend the range of operations of the IAF aircraft by providing real-time pictures of areas not within range.

Launch to open new avenues

  • We have several platforms (military word for aircraft) which have capabilities of communication through satellite. The communication through the satellite will be made possible with this launch. —BS Dhanoa, Air Chief Marshal

Touching new heights

  • GSAT-7A is a military satellite that will enhance Indian Air Force’s networking ability
  • 2,250 kg satellite’s weight, the heaviest lifted by the launch vehicle
  • GSLV-F11 is geosynchronous launch vehicle that put the satellite into the intended orbit
  • 8 yearslife span of the 35th communication satellite that has been built by ISRO
  • 19 minutesafter the lift-off, the GSLV-F11 injected GSAT-7A into the orbit

Its significance

  • Will enable IAF to link its ground radar stations, its airbases and ‘airborne early warning and control system’ planes. The satellite may also control IAF’s unmanned aerial vehicles and drones. It is second satellite since Rukmini (GSAT-7) was launched in Sept 2013