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FM-level talks: Disappointed at India’s ‘arrogant, negative’ response, says Imran

Islamabad, September 22

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Pakistan’s Prime Minister Imran Khan on Saturday expressed “disappointment” at India’s response calling it “arrogant and negative” after New Delhi called off talks between the foreign ministers of the two countries, blaming Islamabad for glorifying terrorism.

“Disappointed at the arrogant and negative response by India to my call for resumption of the peace dialogue,” tweeted Khan.

“However, all my life I have come across small men occupying big offices who do not have the vision to see the larger picture.” Indian External Affairs Ministers Sushma Swaraj and her Pakistani counterpart Shah Mehmood Qureshi were set to meet on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly in New York next week, that could have marked the first thaw in bilateral ties that have steadily deteriorated.

The Indian government said on Friday that it cancelled talks with Pakistan following two “deeply disturbing” developments that led to Islamabad’s “evil agenda” being exposed.

In one incident, terrorists abducted and gunned down three policemen in Jammu and Kashmir, marking a sharp escalation in militancy in the state which India says is backed by Pakistan.

Also, Islamabad had issued postage stamps in memory of Burhan Wani, a Hizbul Mujahideen leader who was shot dead by Indian security forces in July 2016, sparking widespread street protests.

Qureshi had called the development “unfortunate” and claimed that the decision was taken by New Delhi “under internal pressure”.

“The reasons cited by the Indian side for the decision to cancel the foreign ministers’ meeting, within 24 hours of its public confirmation, are entirely unconvincing,” the Pakistan Foreign Ministry had said in a statement. — IANS


No grudge if officers move SC: Nirmala

No grudge if officers move SC:  Nirmala

Nirmala Sitharaman

New Delhi, September 16

Defence Minister Nirmala Sitharaman has said she has no “grudge” against a group of Army officers who have approached the Supreme Court to present their views on cases relating to the Armed Forces Special Powers Act (AFSPA).

The Defence Minister said the officers have chosen to go to the court as there is a “certain sense of worry” in their minds which she can understand. In an unusual move, around 700 Army officers and soldiers have approached the Supreme Court, requesting it to protect the bonafide action of soldiers under AFSPA, and voicing concerns over the reported move to dilute some provisions of the law which protects the security forces from prosecution without the Centre’s approval.

“Grievance redressal is a right. I will never want to say if you have a grievance, you should not voice it. I will never say that. There are institutional mechanisms available for grievance redressal within the Army, Navy and Air Force. So it is possible for men or officers to have grievance redressal institutionalised within the forces,” she said.The Supreme Court has been hearing cases relating to alleged extra-judicial killings in Manipur by the security forces. Army Chief General Bipin Rawat disapproved of the move by the serving officers and soldiers to approach the top court in their personal capacity. At the same time, he had said the forces and the defence ministry are steadfastly behind all officers who have conducted operations in J&K and North-East. — PTI


India won’t lower guard on China borderIndia will not lower its guard along the LAC, while maintaining border peace in sync with the “Wuhan” spirit, Nirmala Sitharaman, Defence Minister, has said. A month after talks with her Chinese counterpart Wei Fenghe, she said both sides recognise the broad decisions arrived at Wuhan, which should govern management of the border.

Air Force plans to make AP strategic base

  • The Air Force has come up with major plans for Andhra Pradesh to make it a “strategic base”
  • It plans to set up a helicopter training facility at Donakonda in Prakasam district and a facility for manufacturing drones in Anantapur district
  • Besides, the Air Force plans to set up a cyber security centre in Amaravati and making Rajahmundry and Vijayawada airports asset positioning bases

Army chief, commanders agree to transform army, trim headquarters, create verticals

Army chief, commanders agree to transform army, trim headquarters, create verticals

NEW DELHI: The Indian Army top brass has come to an agreement that there is a need to transform the army into a more agile fighting force to meet current and future threats. There was a consensus in trimming down the main headquarters by merging certain departments and creating verticals for dealing with operational, procurement and logistical matters for faster decision making.

This comes in the backdrop of reports claiming that the army as part of its restructuring is mulling 1.5 lak ..

Read more at:
//economictimes.indiatimes.com/articleshow/65787037.cms?utm_source=contentofinterest&utm_medium=text&utm_campaign=cppst

Capt pays tributes to Saragarhi battle heroes

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Chandigarh, September 11

Chief Minister Capt Amarinder Singh on Tuesday paid tributes to the heroes of the historic Saragarhi battle, while exhorting the youth to imbibe the values of courage and valour in themselves.

The Chief Minister, who had authored and launched a book, “The 36th Sikhs in the Tirah Campaign 1897-98 – Saragarhi and the defence of the Samana forts”, to mark the battle’s 120th anniversary last year, said the sacrifice of the soldiers of 36th Sikhs will always remain etched as an iconic moment in the history of this infantry regiment of the Indian Army.

He said his government had already announced a series of initiatives as a mark of homage to the valiant soldiers, besides the incorporation of the battle information in school history books. It is important to encourage the youngsters to know about the historic event, which is an ode to the courage and grit of the 22 men who chose death over surrender, he added. — TNS


J&K rifleman’s widow fights depression, joins Army as Lieutenant

J&K rifleman’s widow fights depression, joins Army as Lieutenant

Lt Neeru Sambyal with her daughter Sanidhya in Chennai

Dinesh Manhotra

Tribune News Service

Jammu, September 11

Lieutenant Neeru Sambyal is a proud woman today, her resilience having helped her fight all odds and overcome the toughest phase of her life.

Hailing from Samba  in  Jammu and Kashmir, the Army officer has set an example for those trying to pick up the threads of life. Her message: “Never give up”. “On May 2, 2015, when I lost my husband, I lost everything and slipped into depression. But my two-year-old daughter gave me motivation to come out of hopelessness. I succeeded after several attempts,” says Lt Sambyal.

A ‘C’ certificate holder of the National Cadet Corps, Lt Sambyal was commissioned as a Lieutenant in the Army Ordnance Corps on September 9. She joined the Army in 2017 and graduated as an officer after undergoing a one-year training at the Officers Training Academy, Chennai.

Lt Sambyal lost her husband Rifleman Ravinder Sambyal after three years of their marriage. He passed away while attending a drill in his regiment.

“I belong to a Rajput family  where lot of social stigma is attached to widows. As such, joining the Army would never have been easy… I reluctantly shared the idea with my father-in-law who not only supported it but went out of the way to help me realise my dream,” says Lt Sambyal, her voice choking with emotions.

Lt Sambyal’s brother Varinder Singh Slathia, who is serving in the Air Force, also encouraged her to translate her “bold” decision into reality. Her parents belong to Gurha-Slathia village in Samba district, which is known for producing valiant soldiers. She was married in Baada village in the same district.

“I understand the trauma and agony faced by widows in our conservative society. I was able to take this decision only with the support of my in-laws and brother,” the officer says. Having cracked the SSB exam in the first attempt, Lt Sambyal says her father-in-law and brother’s encouragement were enough for her to fight the odds. “I was least bothered what people would think after my family openly backed me,” she says, adding she now would serve the nation with the same zeal as her late husband did.

 


Pakistan troops violate ceasefire along LoC in Kupwara

Srinagar, September 10Pakistani troops violated the ceasefire along the Line of Control in Jammu and Kashmir by opening firing towards an Indian post in Karnah area in Kupwara district, officials said on Monday.

However, no casualties had been reported, the officials said.

The Pakistani troops from Ziarat post opened firing with small arms at Indian Army’s Black Rock post at 8 pm on Sunday, defence officials said.

“In retaliation, Indian Army at Black Rock also fired on the Pakistani post. The firing was going on from both sides,” the officials said.They said no injury had been reported so far. PTI

Army sets up prayer room in Hajin camp

Tribune News Service

Srinagar, September 9

In a bid to connect to local people, a Rashtriya Rifles (RR) unit in militancy-infested Bandipora district has set up a prayer room inside an Army base.

An Islamic theme-based room has been established at the company operating base (COB) of 13 RR at Shahgund, Hajin, and it was thrown open for the locals on Saturday.

The Army has opened a separate gate for the visitors at the COB.

“We have specially opened a gate inside our camp, which is only for those who want to offer prayers at the Islamic theme-based room. There are no restrictions for the visitors and the gate is open round the clock,” said an officer. He said the aim was to get connected to people and bridge the gap.

The opening event was held in a traditional Islamic way on Sunday and attended by students of the local Darul-ul-Uloom and local religious leaders.

“A felicitation ceremony was also held, wherein 20 students of Darul-ul-Uloom were presented gifts for their academic and sport excellence,” the officer said.

“The huge participation reflected the commitment of the local populace to support the Army’s effort to establish peace and restore normalcy in the region,” he added.

IAF retrieves bodies of two trekkers

IAF retrieves bodies of two trekkers

Our Correspondent

Anantnag, September 9

The Indian Air Force (IAF) on Sunday retrieved the bodies of two trekkers killed during an expedition to Kolhai glacier in Pahalgam and airlifted them to Srinagar.

The deceased include a Kashmir Administrative Services (KAS) officer, Naveed Jeelani, and another trekker Adil Shah of the Alpine Group (a trekking planner based in Srinagar), both residents of Srinagar.

The two trekkers were killed and another was injured after they fell into a crevice at 4,500-metre-high Kolhai Galcier on Friday.

Following the incident, a rescue operation was launched by the police and the State Disaster Response Force. Also, the divisional commissioner had asked the IAF to intervene, following which two helicopters were ready to be pressed in service.

Inclement weather, however, did not permit the flying of helicopters for the whole day on Saturday. The machines flew on Sunday morning and retrieved the bodies of the two deceased.

The bodies have been handed over to the families for the last rites.

Jeelani was a 2015 batch KAS officer and alumnus of the National Institute of Technology in Srinagar. He was presently serving as the excise and taxation officer in the state government.

Shah was a BTech graduate from the Islamic University of Science and Technology and had passed out in 2016.


Nirmala reviews security grid ahead of J&K local body polls Meets new Guv amid heightened militant activity in state

Nirmala reviews security grid ahead of J&K local body polls

Defence Minister Nirmala Sitharaman, with Army Chief Gen Bipin Rawat, interacts with troops in Keran sector on Sunday. PTI

Tribune News Service

Srinagar, September 2

Close on the heels of the announcement of panchayat polls in Jammu and Kashmir, Defence Minister Nirmala Sitharaman and Army Chief General Bipin Rawat arrived in Srinagar on Sunday to discuss internal and external security situation with newly appointed Governor Satya Pal Malik.

It was their first meeting together since the new Governor assumed office.

“They discussed several important issues concerning effective management of internal and external security, particularly in the context of increasing attempts at infiltration and the ongoing anti-terrorist operations,” an official spokesman said.

The two held discussions on the urban local bodies and panchayat elections to be held in October-December.

The meeting comes at a time when terror group Hizbul Mujaideen has issued an open threat to those contesting the polls. “People who want to participate in polls should keep their shroud ready,” Hizbul chief operations commander Riyaz Naikoo said in an audio message. J&K Police chief Shesh Paul Vaid on Sunday said they were prepared for the elections.

The state has already retained over 15,000 Central Armed Police Force personnel deployed for the Amarnath Yatra. However, the situation on the ground is quite difficult, especially in south Kashmir, which continues to remain on the edge.

Militant attacks on policemen have risen sharply in recent months. On Eid, three off-duty cops were shot dead and days later, four more were killed. For the first time in decades of insurgency in Kashmir, militants abducted 10 family members of policemen from south Kashmir in retaliation to the detention of militants’ family members. Though they were later released, it is a cause for concern for the police.

The forces, on the other hand, have intensified anti-militancy operations and killed at least 28 militants along the Line of Control or hinterland since August.

Militants are continuously making attempts to infiltrate into Kashmir. On Saturday, three suspected Pakistan militants were killed in Bandipore.

The militant recruitment this year has overtaken the number of local youth who joined militant ranks in 2017. The spike has set alarm bells ringing for the security forces.

Visits Kupwara forward posts

Accompanied by Army Chief Gen Bipin Rawat, Defence Minister Nirmala Sitharaman visited forward posts in Kupwara on Sunday. She was briefed by commanders about the operational preparedness and counter-infiltration grid, said an Army statement.

 


A compromised force by Lt Gen Bhopinder Singh

Meerut District Magistrate Anil Dhingra (L) and Senior Superintendent of Police Rajesh Kumar Pandey (R) prepare to sprinkle rose petals over "Kanwariyas" during an aerial inspection, in Meerut on August 8, 2018. AFP

he Uttar Pradesh Police is amongst the oldest, and clearly the largest, police force in the country and the world. With a population of over 200 million under its protectorate, it covers a population that is equivalent to that of Brazil. The physical scale aside, the socio-economic challenges and tensions within the state with a known history of civic disorders, riots and societal unrest makes it extremely challenging to police. The 1980 Moradabad riots, 1987 Meerut riots, 1992 demol…

Read more at: https://www.deccanherald.com/opinion/main-article/compromised-force-688731.html..


Don’t demoralise soldiers by diluting AFSPA

If the Armed Forces Special Powers Act is watered down, the army will hesitate to engage with militants

NO SOLDIER WANTS TO SPEND TIME RUNNING AROUND IN CIVIL COURTS TO JUSTIFY HIS ACTIONS WHILE DEALING WITH INSURGENTS AND TERRORISTS

At some point when disenchantment and alienation of the people of an area or state against the political and administrative dispensation go out of hand, the affected state or area is declared ‘disturbed’. In such a situation, if the police are unable to control lawlessness and insurgency, the Indian Army’s help is sought to restore order. Since the military does not have normal police powers for it to control unruly mobs or combat insurgents, the Armed Forces Special Powers Act (AFSPA) was enacted. But before AFSPA is brought in, the concerned area or state has to be declared disturbed by the state or central government. The Act gives the military legal protection, especially when there are injuries or death of miscreants/insurgents. To initiate any legal action against any soldier, acting under AFSPA, the central government’s permission is required.

To give added protection to the military, earlier the civil authority seeking assistance had to provide the military a certificate, saying that all resources have been deployed and the situation is well outside the control of civil administration, and so the military’s help is being sought. This was done to put a check on civil administrations from seeking the military’s assistance at the drop of a hat. But such a certificate showed the civil administration in a poor light, and so the requirement was scrapped. Unfortunately, the military’s high command meekly accepted this decision to do away with the certificate.

In a disturbed area, the local population is usually alienated and anti-national feelings prevail. Consequently, any incident involving casualties to civilians, the locals give evidence against the military. While a few dare to give evidence against the local police, there are always enough witnesses to give false evidence against the military.

Here are two cases that illustrate my point: First, the 2004 Thangjam Manorama case in Manipur.

It was alleged that she was tortured, raped and killed by the military and that she was innocent. But the truth is that she was a terrorist and member of the People’s Liberation Army of Manipur. As part of the organisation, she was involved in laying IEDs that killed six civilians and two security personnel. During the search operation, one transmitter and two grenades were recovered from her. Two independent autopsies ruled out rape and torture, and the nature of the bullet wounds corroborated that she was shot while escaping. Yet allegations continued to be levelled against military personnel.

The second case relates to the alleged murder and rape of two women at Shopian in the Kashmir Valley by military personnel (2009). The local doctor confirmed rape and murder. Later, their bodies were exhumed and a team of independent doctors conducted another round of autopsies. The team ruled out rape and murder. In certain cases, even the local police and administration back down under local public pressure, adopting a hostile attitude towards the military. So, there is an obvious need of AFSPA for the military to operate in disturbed areas.

If the Act is diluted, military personnel will hesitate to engage with militants. No personnel wants to spend time running around in civil courts to justify his actions while dealing with insurgents and terrorists, where for sure, witnesses from local, alienated population will align against him. During firefights, locals gather at the spot and often terrorists fire at them. They do this because they know that any casualty could be pinned on the military. Let us not forget that to date, the Indian Army has lost more than 700 officers and 9,000 soldiers to the insurgency.

Last week, a group of over 300 soldiers approached the Supreme Court, appealing against any “dilution” of AFSPA. The petition said prosecuting soldiers who are doing their duty by the civilian authorities like the police and the Central Bureau of Investigation will lower their morale and endanger national security. This development is a serious one and shows the utter failure of the military’s high command to prevent the development of such circumstances where serving military personnel have to approach the court.

In insurgency-hit areas, the military is the ultimate instrument of the State to be deployed to ensure territorial integrity and security of the country. So why are we so willingly and purposefully demotivating the military?


Puris, pakoras & golf, all so fauji! by Col Avnish Sharma (retd)

Puris, pakoras & golf, all so fauji!

Col Avnish Sharma (retd)

Interesting diktats lately issued by Army Chief Gen Rawat include a radical shift in diet pattern of jawans and  selective ban on  golf. There is also a talk to do away with the Brigadier rank in a fresh restructure attempt.  The General is a well-meaning guy. His recent utterances might fulfil the former two objectives, but whether the third one meets his quest shall be debatable, since to us veterans, all three of his resolves may die a natural death.Puris and pakoras are a staple for our troops. My second-in-command,  an upwardly mobile fellow, during an eventless lull, trooped into my office. ‘Sir, don’t you think we need to transform the diet pattern?’ Now, that sounded out of the box. ‘Tell me, have we had health issues with the boys?’ I was concerned. ‘No, Sir. It may occur in the future and moreover, we need variety in the fare.’ I was relieved and gave the go ahead and forgot about it. The first one to observe the change was my wife. During a welfare meet with soldiers’ families sorely missing the pakoras,  when she enquired about their absence, the Risaldar Major’s wife expressed her woe, ‘CO sahib ka hukam hai madam.’ I brushed aside the predicament of my wife since the change was meant for our soldiers and the peripherals would fall in place with time.

The same evening, during a function, the CO of the neighbouring unit came to me with a concerned look. ‘Are there any disruptions in supplies of rations in your unit?’ ‘Not that I know of,’ I was sceptical, ‘why do you ask?’ ‘A lot of your jawans cross over to my unit for  breakfast!’ The second-in-command’s innovative move saw its end that very moment.Our GOC was a thorough professional, but somewhat eccentric. One saw him at regular morning walks but he despised golf, golf course and   golfers. To reiterate his conviction, he would often echo his conversation with a group of officers’ wives, who he referred to as ‘golf widows’— ‘We would rather prefer our husbands having an affair than play golf!’ Most of us were convinced that this dialogue was self coined.

Our weekly golf round was threatened when he contemplated turning the golf course into an obstacle course, when suddenly there was a pleasant buzz. His son, studying abroad, had turned into an accomplished golfer and was coming with his golfing friends to enjoy the exquisite course. Golfers in station heaved a sigh of relief when the GOC started echoing a fresh sermon, ‘Golf is an enriching game which exercises your body and mind. It has unmatched therapeutic benefits!’Prasads and we are long-time friends. Mrs Prasad is a diehard believer in astrology. An astrologer had predicted that her son, a young Army officer, would reach the rank of a Brigadier. With the proposal to do away with the rank, she is all set to lose faith in her erstwhile belief. Alas.