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Missing AN-32 untraced Search operations continue, without luck

Missing AN-32 untraced
Parents of Flt Lt Deepika Sheoran who was on board the AN-32 with her photo in Bhiwani. Indervesh Duhan

Tribune News Service

New Delhi, July 23

Even as a massive search for the missing Indian Air Force AN-32 transport plane carrying 29 on board continued for the second day today, questions are being raised as to how the plane disappeared without the pilots sending out a distress call.The plane has been missing since Friday after it took off from the Tambaram airbase, Chennai, at 8.30 am on a routine flight to Port Blair.The last radio contact was at 8.46 am and the plane was last spotted on the radar at 9.12 am when it was 151 nautical miles east of Chennai, over the Bay of Bengal. The IAF informed Defence Minister Manohar Parrikar that the aircraft made a left turn with a rapid loss of height from 23,000 feet. Parrikar flew with a search sortie aboard Navy’s P8-I aircraft this morning. He was shown images originating from the scanners and sensors.Air Chief Marshal Arup Raha and Navy Eastern Command Chief Vice-Admiral HCS Bisht accompanied him.(Follow The Tribune on Facebook; and Twitter @thetribunechd)The disappearance of the AN-32 is being seen with concern in the IAF as the Soviet-built aircraft are designed to fly even during emergency situations. 

Hope against hope in Bhiwani

Sat Singh

Tribune News Service

Bhiwani, July 23

“We pray that not only our daughter, but all 29 on board AN-32 return home safely,” the parents of Flight Lieutenant Deepika Sheoran stoically said here today. They have not given in to despair. They believe they will be reunited with their eldest child soon. The family belongs to Todda Dhani village in Bhiwani district.  “Deepika was a brilliant student. After BTech, she was preparing for the civil services when she decided to sit for the Combined Defence Services test. She made it in her first attempt,” recalled Dalip Sheoran with pride. An XEN (Public Health), he is posted at Hansi. Deepika joined the Indian Air Force in 2013 and her  first posting was at Port Blair. She married Kuldeep Dalal of Bhiwani, Commandant with the Indian Navy, on November 22, 2015. Her mother Prem Lata said she had spoken to her on the phone on Thursday night. “She told me that their plane would be returning to Port Blair on Friday.”  The Sheorans appealed to the Central Government to step up efforts to locate the missing plane and “bring back the survivors”.Meanwhile, Andhra Pradesh CM N Chandrababu Naidu today met family members of employees of the Naval Armament Depot (NAD) in Visakhapatnam. Eight employees of the depot were among those who boarded the AN-32 aircraft.

Before losing contact, pilot wanted to alter course

Vijay Mohan

Tribune News Service

Chandigarh, July 23

The aircrew of the AN-32 transport aircraft that went missing over the Bay of Bengal on Friday had asked the Chennai air traffic control (ATC) for a course deviation a few minutes before it reportedly lost contact with the ATC, it is learnt.IAF sources said around 9 am, the pilot had requested permission from the ATC to alter his course by 10 degrees to the right, ostensibly because of the prevailing weather conditions.The weather in the search area today was bad, with overhead clouds, rough seas and visibility being 3-4 nautical miles.The recently upgraded aircraft, which is reported to have suffered three snags this months, had left Tambaram airbase near Chennai at 8.30 am on Friday and was to land at Port Blair around 11.45 am. It fell off the radar at 9.12 am, 151 nautical miles (280 kms) east of Chennai.Permission to change course, sources said, was accorded. The aircraft had been cleared to fly at an altitude of 23,000 feet, which it would have reached in about 15 minutes after take-off with full load.“The possibilities here are that the aircraft flew into the eye of a storm or suffered a structural or electrical failure. Sabotage also cannot be discounted at this stage. These situations give little or no reaction time to transmit a distress signal,” an AN-32 pilot said.In June 2015, a Coast Guard Dornier aircraft had gone missing off the Chennai coast. Its remains were located 33 days later. An inquiry could not establish the cause of the crash.Under IAF’s standard operating procedure, the long sea stretch between Chennai and Port Blair requires AN-32s to fly with full fuel which is 5.5 tonnes. Five tonnes is pumped by tankers through under-wing access nodes, while the remaining is “poured” through an opening above the wing roots that requires a technician to climb on top of the aircraft and manually operate the fuel cap.An AN-32 pilot recalled an incident many years ago where the fuel cap of an aircraft was not properly secured. Mid-way over the Bay of Bengal, the aircrew observed unusually high fuel consumption. Inspection after landing revealed that the unsecured fuel cap had blown off in the air. “The air friction over the wing is very high and volatile fumes from the aviation fuel could have produced a spark with disastrous consequences. It was a miraculous escape from the aircraft,” he added.


The questions that Kashmiris don’t ask – An Army veteran’s letter

he killing of Hizbul Mujahideen’s chief Burhan Wani in Kashmir has led to unrest and violence across Kashmir with 34 people dead. Some have eulogised Wani as a poster boy and a martyr while others have warned of romanticising violence. Major Gaurav Arya, a veteran of anti-insurgency operations in Kashmir, writes a brutal open letter to the dead Burhan Wani.

Hizbul's Wani killing: Over 20,000 attend funeral

Ever since you were terminated in a forces-led operation in the Valley, 23 people have died. I don’t know why they died. The majority were possibly overcome with grief and fury and wanted to avenge your death. That did not happen, for obvious reasons. A policeman was thrown along with his vehicle into a river and he drowned. I grieve with your family and with the families of all those who lost their lives. Despicable though you may have been, I cannot find it in my heart to blame your family. You could have been an engineer, a doctor, an archeologist or a software programmer but your fate drew you to the seductive world of social media, with its instant celebrity hood and all encompassing fame. You posted pictures on the internet with your “brothers”, all you fine young Rambos holding assault rifles and radio sets. It was right out of Hollywood. Your rifle’s fire selector switch was set to “safe” and your weapon rested on your shoulder. I know it’s too late to advise you on such matters, but never do that in an operational area. The day you started with your social media blitzkrieg, you were a dead man. You encouraged young men of Kashmir to kill Indian soldiers, all from behind the safety of your Facebook account. Your female fan following was delirious. You were a social media rage. Unknown to you, there was an Army engineer nerd with a laptop, sitting in an airconditioned room in HQ XV Corps, tracking you 24/7. You died when you were 22. Had you survived this operation, you would have died when you were 23. Just a different date on the calendar, that’s all. The intensity of violence and the result would have been the same. I wish we had met and I could have explained to you (before killing you) that the old men of the Hurriyat Conference are like leech. They feed on the blood of men. They send young Kashmiris to face the Indian Army. What sort of a war is this, where lambs are sent to fight lions? I would have shown you the sheer duplicity of the Hurriyat, with their sons living abroad, pursuing professions other than jihad. Name one relative of Syed Ali Geelani, the head of the Hurriyat Conference, who is fighting the so-called Indian “occupation”? His son Nayeem Geelani is a doctor in Rawalpindi, and lives under the patronage of the Pakistani ISI. Zahoor, his second son, lives in South Delhi. Mirwaiz Umar Farooq’s sister Rabia is a doctor in the US. Mariyam Andrabi, sister of head of the radical Dukhtran-e-Millat, Asiya Andrabi, along with her family lives in Malaysia. Every Kashmiri separatist leader’s daughter or son is rich and safe, outside Kashmir. Jihad is for other people’s sons. And your parent’s son is dead. Dead from a 7.62 mm full metal jacket round to the head. Kashmir’s young and restless blame the security forces for killing them. But they never question the Hurriyat. No one asks Syed Ali Geelani why Burhan Wani is not from his family. Pakistani media was ecstatic when Kashmiris celebrated Eid this year along with Pakistan and not with the rest of India. This was reported as a blow to the unity of India. This is the first time in the 1400 year history of Islam that Eid was declared, not by witnessing the Shawwal moon, but by looking towards Pakistan. Well done. The Hurriyat has nothing to do with Kashmiris. This unrest, this bloodshed is just another business. If not, I would like to see the list of martyrs from the Hurriyat leadership’s families. The Hurriyat knows too well that Kashmir has fallen off the map of the world’s attention. No one cares and everyone knows that it is an artificially manufactured conflict. The Kashmir dispute exists because it is an inexpensive way for Pakistan to keep Indian forces bogged down in the valley. You were a terrorist. You chose to wage war against India. Like for all other such perpetrators in the past, it didn’t go too well for you. When you choose to fight against the Indian Army, know this – they will kill you. Your supporters now want blood. So be it.” –

Major Gaurav Arya (Veteran)http://www.sify.com/news/the-questions-that-kashmiris-dont-ask—an-army-veterans-letter-news-national-qhos73fjbaahg.html

 


Speed up Rafale deal: Govt to panel

New Delhi, July 14

The wait for India to procure 36 Rafale jets continues to stretch, as the committee negotiating to seal the deal with the French is still on the job. The Defence Acquisition Council (DAC) of the Ministry of Defence that met here under the Chairmanship of Defence Minister Manohar Parrikar directed the committee to submit its report expeditiously, sources said.

The decision to buy the jets was announced over two years ago but the negotiations over price and other issues continue in the €7.9 million deal (Rs60,000 crore) between France and India. — TNS


आतंकवादी को हीरो बताने वाले हैं देशद्रोही: मुल्तानी

अंबाला (रोजी बहल): अंबाला छावनी के पी.डब्ल्यू.डी. रेस्ट हाऊस में आज भूतपूर्व सैनिक वेलफेयर कमेटी के सदस्यों ने बैठक की, जिसमें बताया गया कि सैनिक अपने कर्त्तव्यों से पीछे नहीं हटेगी।

जानकारी के अनुसार वन रैंक वन पेंशन की मांग कई वर्षों से करते आ रहे पूर्व सैनिक अब भी अपने कर्त्तव्य से पीछे नहीं हटे हैं। सरकार द्वारा दी गई वन रेंक वन पेंशन से नाखुश पूर्व सैनिक अभी भी सरकार की मदद को तैयार खड़े हैं। तभी तो उन्होंने आज सभी पूर्व सैनिकों के साथ मीटिंग की अौर आने वाले समय में बाढ़ जैसी स्थिति से निपटने के लिए सरकार से अपील की है कि अगर कोई आपदा आती है तो सरकार पूर्व सैनिकों की मदद लें। पूर्व सैनिक सब तैयार बैठे हैं।

कमेटी के प्रधान अतर सिंह मुल्तानी ने कहा कि इस समय बरसात का मौसम है और अगर बाढ़ या त्रासदी आती है तो सरकार पूर्व सैनिकों से मदद लें। पूर्व सैनिक तैयार बैठे हैं। उन्होंने भी सैनिको को तैयार रहने के आदेश जारी किए हैं कि कहीं भी रहो अगर कोई आपदा आती है तो वे लोगों कि मदद करे।

उन्होंने कश्मीर में जो आतंकवादी हमला हुआ है, इसमें भूतपूर्व नेता मारे गए आतंकवादी को शहीद बता रहे हैं, वे देश के गद्दार हैं। उन्होंने कहा कि जो भी लीडर उनका समर्थन कर रहे हैं, वे देश के साथ गद्दारी कर रहे हैं । शहीद तो उनके देश के सैनिक हो रहे हैं जो देश कि दिन-रात सेवा कर रहे है। जो भी आतंकवादी को हीरो बता रहे हैं, उसे देशद्रोही घोषित करना चाहिए।

IMG-20160712-WA0034


दिल्ली में मजाक करते हुए मुझे थोड़ा डर लगता है : पर्रिकर

दिल्ली में मजाक करते हुए मुझे थोड़ा डर लगता है : पर्रिकर

पणजी : प्रधानमंत्री नरेन्द्र मोदी द्वारा सार्वजनिक जीवन से हंसी-मजाक गायब होने की बात कहे जाने के कुछ ही दिनों बाद, रक्षा मंत्री मनोहर पर्रिकर ने शनिवार को कहा कि उन्हें दिल्ली में मजाक करते हुए थोड़ा डर सा लगता है क्योंकि उसके गलत मायने निकाले जा सकते हैं।

गोवा इंजीनियरिंग कॉलेज के स्वर्ण जयंती के अवसर पर आयोजित समारोह में पर्रिकर ने कहा, ‘मुझे यहां (गोवा) रहना अच्छा लगता है। जब मैं गोवा में होता हूं, मजाक करने की स्वतंत्रता ले सकता हूं। दिल्ली में, मुझे मजाक करते हुए कुछ डर लगता है, क्योंकि यदि मैं मजाक भी कर रहा हूं.. तो उसका गलत अर्थ निकाला जा सकता है और भ्रम पैदा हो सकता है।’

उन्होंने दिल्ली में मीडिया का जिक्र करते हुए कहा, ‘वह हमेशा विवादों की खोज में रहते हैं। यहां (गोवा) हम सामान्य तरीके से मजाक करते हैं।’ इससे पहले एक निजी टीवी चैनल को दिए गए साक्षात्कार में मोदी ने कहा था, ‘चौबीसों घंटे वाले समाचार चैनलों के समय में, कोई भी एक शब्द उठाकर उसका बड़ा मुद्दा बना सकता है। लेकिन मैं आपको सच्चाई बताता हूं, सार्वजनिक जीवन में हास्य की कमी का कारण डर है। मैं खुद भी डरा हुआ हूं। पहले जब मैं भाषण देता था, तो उन्हें मजाकिया बनाता था, लेकिन उसका कोई मुद्दा नहीं बना।’

पर्रिकर ने कहा, ‘मुझे याद है, मैंने गोवा इंजीनियरिंग कॉलेज के महिला छात्रवास का उद्घाटन किया था और कहा था कि 30-40 साल पुराना मेरा महिला छात्रावास में जाने का सपना पूरा हो गया।’


Indian, Pak forces exchange sweets on LoC

Indian, Pak forces exchange sweets on LoC
Indian and Pakistani troops exchange sweets on the Line of Control on Wednesday. A tribune Photo

Tribune News Service

Srinagar, July 6

Indian and Pakistani security forces exchanged sweets along the Line of Control (LoC) in north Kashmir on the occasion of Eid-ul-Fitr today, the Army said in a statement said.”The security forces of India and Pakistan along the borders at Uri and Tangdhar today exchanged sweets and pleasantries on the festive occasion of Eid-ul-Fitr in a genial and cordial atmosphere,” the Army here said”The auspicious festival of Eid-ul-Fitr was marked by bonhomie at the borders with forces on both sides greeting each other and exchanging sweets,” it said. The Army said such gestures are deemed to “foster peace and harmony and promote prosperity and happiness.”


The Negatives Of The 7th Pay Commission: Nation Suffers From Civil-Military Confrontation BY Syed Ata Hasnain

Does the 7th Pay Commission give unfair primacy to the civil services at the cost of the armed forces? Lt Gen Syed Ata Hasnain (retd) weighs in on the issue:

Sitting somewhere in Islamabad or elsewhere in Pakistan and in fact in many other places where India’s adversaries exist and monitor our social media, television and print media, there must be considerable mirth and much joy. A look at the way in which the 7th Pay Commission recommendations have ignited the civil-military divide in India and brought out the entire issue in the public domain must really be a finger-licking moment for our adversaries. Pakistan’s Inter Services Public Relations (ISPR), who I always praise to high heavens for its complete professionalism, would probably in its Mondaybrief state that it is holiday time; the target is in self-destruct mode.

Sunday night’s program, ‘We the People’, on NDTV on 20 Mar 2016, on the 7th Pay Commission recommendations was probably a path-breaking event in the exercise of outreach and sensitization. The ‘us’ versus ‘them’ was out in the open. Right from the Third Pay Commission which saw the reduction of pension and lowering of status (that actually started well before) each such Commission has consciously diluted the military’s standing while the changing environment only added to the responsibilities and expectations from the men in uniform. There is no need to go into history all over again except to mention that the traditional antipathy Nehru had against the Army always colored his judgment. This disdain arose out of three things. First was his belief that pre-Partition, the Army worked for the colonial masters and not for the National movement. Second was his fear that the Army would not remain apolitical and would probably have ambitions of its own. Third remained his utopian idea that India had no enemies and all it needed was a stick wielding police force to manage order.

His perceptions were no doubt reinforced by an ICS oriented civil service who could not have asked for more. The Army leadership was silent and table thumping was not its forte. It never objected to its own virtual disenfranchisement from the national security domain which came to be dominated by the bureaucrat diplomat combine who played on the fears of the political leadership. They assiduously garnered the national security space shutting out all three Services and playing them against each other.

The glorious victory of 1971 created a major dilemma because it was the nation’s victory made possible by the Armed Forces. Adulation among the public was at a high and the personality of senior leaders with ‘spine’ as a major element of their mental makeup was causing concern. It wasn’t a happy situation for the civilian leadership. With this backdrop, since 1972 there has been a systematic campaign to whittle down the image of the Armed Forces and their position. The Pay Commissions could be virtually seen as a means of tying the Armed Forces down with pay being the deciding factor to determine status. With each passing Commission the attempt to complicate the system and leave milestones in forms of unresolved anomalies helped to tie everyone in knots. It’s a great strategy which ensures primacy in pay and status to the civilian while the Armed Forces continue to live and function by their discipline and accountability.

The above was not a narration of history but just a few painful facts which cannot go away from any analysis. Before coming to the actual issues involving pay and status and the arguments of the senior veteran bureaucrats let me reiterate a few things. Decisions which even affect functional efficiency are ignored and just postponed. Would any member of the bureaucracy have an explanation for the 20-year old representation of the Army that the Central Armed Police Forces (CAPFs) must be distinctive from the Army in accoutrements and at least with reference to the disruptive pattern combat dress? The issue finally came to a head in the recent agitation in Haryana where the Army had to suffer the ignominy of using placards to identify itself.

This is not a point by point analysis or debate. Sunday’s NDTV program would have helped clear a few cobwebs but equally add a few more. The one issue no bureaucrat seems to be able to explain is the absence of a representative from the Armed Forces on the Pay Commission. They put up a great argument to say that none of the members represent any service. That is as good as burying your head in the sand. When there is continued obfuscation of issues, anomalies of the past remain unresolved and the largest of the organizations has remained dissatisfied with the Pay Commission system, prudence demands that a fresh approach be followed. This is where the political leadership has to step in, otherwise the continuum of burial of contentious issues under the carpet will only lead to a breakdown of the system.

We earlier had a set of military men who gave great credence to acceptance of the word of the civilian leadership. That is changing faster than the members of the Pay Commission or the political leadership would like to believe or have been informed about. In 2012 the military leadership in good faith opted to continue with the old system of the common pay commission for all, placing confidence in the wisdom of the political leadership. It appears they will live to rue that decision.

The bureaucrats on the panel of the NDTV program tried to confuse and confound with two arguments; first that the government needs to do a cost benefit analysis to compare the cost of upkeep of civilian functionaries and that of servicemen; and second that Service officers rose to high ranks and remained in service long enough to earn like all others. It needed someone to point out to them that the benefit of the cost of upkeep of Service personnel could never be quantified. In fact a visibly upset former Army Chief General VP Malik had to use unusually harsh words to state clearly that it was up to the Government to decide the strength of the Armed Forces and the quantum it could afford for national security. The Cost to Government (CTG) seems to be a carefully adapted strategy by the bureaucracy this time. It probably hasn’t seen the end of the day yet and will emerge again in even the Empowered Committee of Secretaries where the three Services go unrepresented yet again.

The Government has yet to come out with any credible argument on why this has not happened. In making the second argument the bureaucrats forgot about the percentage approval rates for higher ranks. For public consumption it must be known that at first select rank of Colonel 60-70 percent of the officers are unlikely to be promoted. Thereafter at each higher select rank the number dwindles by more than fifty percent. For an original strength of over 800 officers commissioned in 1974 only twenty or so could make it to the three star rank; they thus retired from ages of 54 to 58 with just 20 or so achieving 60. Contrast this with the bureaucrats where each and every entrant retires at 60 years of age and comparative three star rank with many going up to Secretary (four star equivalent). Leave the officer cadre and you have other ranks among soldiers and equivalent where 80 percent retire at 34 to 37 years. Chalk and cheese, apples and oranges is what the bureaucrats spoke of; that there are no ways by which we could find equivalence in environment, promotion opportunities and ages of retirements so why compare wages. In fact a senior JCO in the audience spoke up and asked for assured re-employment till the age of 60 years for all exiting soldiers as a means of resolving all issues. Then the Servicemen would be at par with civilian counterparts and would demand no higher compensation.

Half the problem lies in the lack of knowledge among the political class. Worthies should know that military security cannot be wished away; equally a high quality administration and efficient/motivated bureaucracy is a must. Both must be treated at par, compensating where there is fair and acceptable perceived grievance. To assume that the supposed premier civil services should be given triple increments at different stages while the Armed Forces remain laggards in promotion progression and receive single increments all along, is calling for disgruntlement. In a system where basic pay decides status obviously by accepting the recommendation the Services would be axing their own feet for ever.

The Non Functional Financial Upgradation (NFFU) system doesn’t appear to be understood by the public because of lack of transparency. The civil services have conveniently linked their pay increments to years of service irrespective of rank achieved. This is a huge outflow of public money irrespective of work output. Promotion in all systems brings higher wages and acts as incentive and motivation for higher efficiency and better qualification. Not so in our civil services where year on year salaries increase irrespective of higher rank being achieved or not achieved. This has led to a piquant situation within organizations where there are uniformed and civilians working together such as in Military Engineering Service (MES) (not Corps of Engineers which is a combatants based organization) and Border Roads Organization (BRO). In these organizations civilian subordinates who earlier earned less than their uniformed superiors received pay increments irrespective of promotions and started earning equivalent to or more than the superiors.

Since status is dictated by pay they refused to have their Confidential Reports endorsed by their superiors on technical grounds of higher status. Such a situation must never have occurred in any other organization in the world. The decision to grant NFFU had obviously never catered for such a situation. The Services were divided on the issue of NFFU. In a strictly hierarchical system you cannot have a superior earning less than the subordinate; it is against all norms of functioning. This issue did not even come up for discussion on the NDTV program for shortage of time and possibly expertise because there are no answers to it. NFFU is bad for the entire system of government machinery and should be done away with. Increments must be streamlined to common application for all personnel, civilian or in uniform. If the Armed Forces are not to be given any favors beyond those which are owed by virtue of the nature of the job as recognized the world over, then special increments must be given to none others.

The public must also be made aware that the 6th Pay Commission still has approximately 22 anomalies to be resolved and once the 7th pay Commission recommendations are adopted these will be conveniently forgotten. What answer does anyone have to the competence and credibility of the Pay Commissions when representations after representation in pensions and pay bands have been shot down by the honorable courts? Will Servicemen ever have belief in fair play and will the civil services officers who form the Pay Commissions ever represent interests other than of their own service? It is very well to argue that such eminent persons are supposed to be even handed in their responsibilities as custodians of values but the proof of the pudding is in the eating.

The Armed Forces may not have chosen the personalities on display in the program but emotions and choice of wrong words can and will work against them. The public has to be informed and informed without rancor, emotion and negativity. People in uniform are supposed to be patient as per their discipline and their families must carry that same value system otherwise the debate will be hijacked by emphasis on the wrong issues as it almost happened on the program.

A misnomer unanswered in the program and a linked question thrown at me on social media. How is it that so many Armed Forces officers live in splendor and own high value automobiles and travel abroad, if they claim to be poorly paid. Firstly, the Government of India is a worthy paymaster; that it looks after its employees well is beyond debate. However, there are many propertied people who hardly rely on pay and allowances. In fact that is true even among some jawans. That however, is the exception and not the rule.

Secondly, the glamorous are visible not the sedate – an old adage as much applicable today. Thirdly, service life teaches dignity and helps you acquire it in a transformational way unlike civil services where jobs are many times transactional in nature. The Army’s regimental system creates bonds and a social life which goes beyond the ordinary. All this is observed from outside and perceived as a higher status in standard of living. It actually is but not because of better pay but better organization and ethos.

Finally, to the last word and a revisit to the issue raised in the first paragraph. The cleavage between the Armed Forces and the Civil Services is increasing by the day. It smacks of national immaturity if personnel selected to man government jobs and function for the national good cannot see beyond the individual good of their own departments; it is indeed a sad commentary. This is leading to tardiness in government functioning, personality clashes where there should be total cooperation and much disappointment within the public which is forced to take sides based upon who has been able to influence whom at a given point of time.

This is a ready-made recipe to play into the hands of our adversaries who would also soon be involved in planting disinformation and playing off one against the other. The nation should look towards the sagacity of a few good men who can still put service before self. The Government must realize the looming threat of dysfunctional and demotivating influence on its own machinery and hasten to act against it. The first step should be a representative body of respected personalities to comprehensively examine the mismatch in the personnel management system involving pay, allowances and status of government servants. Perhaps even personalities of eminence from outside the government could add much worth to this.

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Lt Gen Syed Ata Hasnain


At 106, soldier sees futility of fighting

HIRA (KALKA): Life has come full circle for Naik Sarup Singh, who turns 106 on July 15. He spent his prime fighting wars for Britain and later independent India only to realise their futility a century later.

ANIL DAYAL/HTFREEZE FRAME: Naik Sarup Singh showing his photos from another era.

“Ladaiyi barbadi hai. Kisi bhi mulk mein nahin honi chahidi (War is destruction, it should not happen in any country),” says the soldier recruited in 15 Punjab to fight the Japanese in World War II.

“I took part in the Burma campaign. Our job was to cut the Japanese soldiers’ lines of communication and halt their advance towards India. We were surrounded, but survived,” he says.

His grandson pins the medals on his white cotton shirt that sags under their weight.

“Fighting for the British was a duty but fighting Pakistan in Jammu and Kashmir from 1947-48 was for honour. From Zojila Pass to the plains of Chamb Jaurian, I have fought on every morcha (front) in J&K,” he says.

The irony is not lost on him as he recounts the heroics 70 years on. LONE SURVIVOR

He came from a poor family in Kalka and was the fifth of seven brothers. The British were drafting Indian youth to fight their war and he was trained at 15 Punjab’s Ramgarh headquarters (now in Jharkhand). “Wahan toh maarna hi sikhate hain (They only taught us to kill),” says the veteran who retired in 1959.

He married Naseeb Kaur, 20 years younger, when he was on the verge of retirement. “I saw her for the first time when I went to look up her ailing father at a Patiala hospital. Her sister was married to my brother,” he says.

The couple had six children of which two are no more.

“My grandfather gets emotional when we talk of family members and friends who have passed away,” says Gurdeep Kaur, 26, a mother of two daughters.

“At his age, it’s more about the mind than the body. He prays twice a day. He helps around the house and is a vegetarian. He enjoys barfi (a sweet) at times,” she says.


7वें वेतन आयोग की सिफारिशें कैबिनेट ने मंजूर की, 23 प्रतिशत से अधिक होगी कर्मचारियों की वेतन वृद्धि

7वें वेतन आयोग की सिफारिशें कैबिनेट ने मंजूर की, 23 प्रतिशत से अधिक होगी कर्मचारियों की वेतन वृद्धि

नई दिल्ली: मोदी कैबिनेट की आज हुई एक अहम बैठक में 7वें वेतन आयोग की सिफारिशों को लागू करने का फैसला किया गया है।  सूत्रों के अनुसार, कैबिनेट ने सातवें वेतन आयोग की सिफारिशों से ज्यादा वेतनमान देने की मंजूरी दी है। वहीं बीजेपी प्रवक्ता शाहनवाज हुसैन की मानें तो कर्मचारियों को 23 फीसदी से अधिक की वेतन वृद्धि मिलने जा रही है।

वेतन आयोग के  अलग-अलग बिंदुओं पर चर्चा हुई है। सभी विषयों पर लिए गए निर्णयों को सम्मिलित कर नोट तैयार किया जा रहा है। आज शाम 5.30 बजे वित्तमंत्री अरुण जेटली इस बारे में औपचारिक रूप से बयान देंगे। जेटली ने एक बयान देकर सरकारी कर्मचारियों और अफसरों को बधाई दी है। उन्होंने इस बढ़ोतरी को ऐतिहासिक करार दिया है।

एक अधिकारी ने कहा कि ग्रेडेड इंक्रीज इन बेसिक सैलरी पर कैबिनेट ने चर्चा की है। ऐसा माना जा रहा है कि अधिकतर लोगों के लिए 20 प्रतिशत की बढ़ोतरी हुई है। कुछ पदों पर 25 फीसदी की बढ़ोतरी पर चर्चा हुई है।

मिली जानकारी के अनुसार, यह बढ़ा वेतनमान 1 जनवरी 2016 से लागू होगा। अब करीब 15-25 दिनों में सभी विभाग अपने अपने कर्मचारियों के वेतनमान तय कर लेंगे और कहा जा रहा है कि जुलाई में मिलने वाले वेतन में पूरा एरियर और बढ़ा वेतन दे दिया जाएगा।

बीजेपी प्रवक्ता शाहनवाज हुसैन ने एक ट्वीट कर जानकारी दी है कि सरकारी कर्मचारी को 23 प्रतिशत से अधिक सैलरी की वृद्धि मिलेगी।

वेतन वृद्धि के ऐलान के बाद 50 लाख सरकारी कर्मचारी और 58 लाख पेंशनधारियों के हाथों में ज्यादा पैसा आएगा। कहा जा रहा है कि इस वेतन वृद्धि से रीयल एस्टेट सेक्टर और ऑटोमोबाइल सेक्टर में उछाल आएगा। ( सातवें पे कमिशन को लेकर 5 मिथ, जिन्हें जानना आपके लिए बेहद जरूरी है…)

आरबीआई ने एक आकलन में अप्रैल में कहा था कि अगर आयोग की रिपोर्ट को ऐसे ही लागू किया गया तो 1.5 फीसदी महंगाई बढ़ जाएगी। वैसे कैबिनेट बैठक में शॉप एंड एस्टैब्लिसमैंट बिल पर चर्चा हुई है। (सातवें वेतन आयोग पर रवीश कुमार का ब्लॉग : सैलरी बढ़ने को तर्कबुद्धि और तथ्यबुद्धि से देखिए… )

इस बढ़े वेतनमान का फायदा 1 करोड़ से ज्यादा सरकारी कर्मचारियों और पेंशनधारियों को मिलेगा। इससे पहले सातवें वेतन आयोग ने अपनी रिपोर्ट में सरकारी कर्मचारियों की बेसिक सैलरी में 14.27 फीसदी बढ़ोत्तरी की सिफारिश की थी। (7वें वेतन आयोग की रिपोर्ट का वह सुझाव जिस पर कई कर्मचारियों को होगी आपत्ति!)

साथ ही आयोग ने एंट्री लेवल सैलरी 7,000 रुपये प्रति महीने से बढ़ाकर 18,000 रुपये प्रति महीने करने का प्रस्ताव सरकार के सामने रखा। (केंद्रीय कर्मचारियों को 7वें वेतन आयोग का लाभ होगा, पढ़ें – क्या हैं आयोग की सिफारिशें)

इनकी बढ़ेगी सैलरी
-सातवें वेतन आयोग ने अपनी रिपोर्ट में सरकारी कर्मचारियों की बेसिक सैलरी में 14.27 फीसदी बढ़ोत्तरी की सिफारिश की थी।
-माना जा रहा है कि कैबिनेट बैसिक सैलरी में 18 से 20 फीसदी तक की बढ़ोत्तरी के प्रस्ताव को मंजूरी दे सकती है।
-इसका फायदा 50 लाख सरकारी कर्मचारियों और 58 लाख पेंशनधारियों को मिलेगा।
-नई सैलरी 1 जनवरी 2016 से लागू होगी, यानी सरकारी कर्मचारियों को छह महीने का एरियर मिलेगा।
-कैबिनेट तय करेगी कि एरियर एक मुश्त दिया जाए या किश्तों में दिया जाए।
-सातवें वेतन आयोग ने इंट्री लेवल सैलरी 7,000 रू प्रति महीने से बढ़ाकर 18,000 रुपये प्रति महीने करने के प्रस्ताव सरकार के सामने रखा।
-कैबिनेट सचिव की मौजूदा सैलरी 90,000 से बढ़ाकर 2.50 लाख रुपये करने की सिफारिश की है।

1 जनवरी 2016 से लागू होंगी सिफारिशें
छठा वेतन आयोग 1 जनवरी, 2006 से लागू हुआ था और उम्मीद है कि सातवें वेतन आयोग की सिफारिशें 1 जनवरी, 2016 से लागू होंगी और कर्मचारियों को एरियर दिया जाएगा। आमतौर पर राज्यों द्वारा भी कुछ संशोधनों के साथ इन्हें अपनाया जाता है। कहा जा रहा है कि नए वेतन ढांचे में सातवें वेतन आयोग ने छठे वेतन आयोग द्वारा शुरू की गई ‘पे ग्रेड’ व्यवस्था खत्म कर इसे वेतन के मैट्रिक्स (ढांचे) में शामिल कर दिया है और कर्मचारी का ओहदा अब ग्रेड पे की जगह नए ढांचे के वेतन से तय होगा।

सलाना 3% वेतन बढ़ाने की सिफारिश
वित्त मंत्री अरुण जेटली को सौंपी गई वेतन आयोग की रिपोर्ट में मौजूदा कर्मचारियों के मूल वेतन में 16%, भत्तों में 63% और पेंशन में 24% इजाफे की सिफारिश की गई है। न्यायमूर्ति एके माथुर की अगुवाई वाले इस सातवें वेतन आयोग ने सरकारी कर्मचारियों का न्यूनतम वेतन 18 हजार और अधिकतम 2.50 लाख रुपये तय करने की सिफारिश की है। इसके अलावा आयोग ने केंद्रीय कर्मचारियों के वेतन में सालाना तीन फीसदी वृद्धि की भी सिफारिश की है।

सरकारी खजाने पर सलाना 1.02 लाख करोड़ का बोझ
आयोग की सिफारिशें जस की तस लागू करने पर सरकारी खजाने पर 1.02 लाख करोड़ रुपये का सालाना बोझ आएगा, जिसमें 28,450 करोड़ रुपये से अधिक का बोझ रेलवे बजट और बाकी 73,650 करोड़ रुपये आम बजट पर जाएगा।


7वें वेतन आयोग की सिफारिशों से नाराज 32 लाख सरकारी कर्मचारी 11 जुलाई से हड़ताल पर

7वें वेतन आयोग की सिफारिशों से नाराज 32 लाख सरकारी कर्मचारी 11 जुलाई से हड़ताल पर

नई दिल्ली: सातवें वेतन आयोग की सिफारिशों से नाराज 32 लाख कर्मचारी 11 जुलाई से हड़ताल पर हैं। सिफारिशों को बुधवार को ही सरकार ने मंज़ूरी ही है। वहीं सातवें वेतन आयोग की रिपोर्ट को लेकर विरोध शुरू हो गया है। सरकारी कर्मचारियों के महासंघ ने 11 जुलाई को हड़ताल पर जाने का ऐलान किया है।

सरकारी कर्मचारियों के महासंघ ने हड़ताल पर जाने का ऐलान किया है। इनमें रेलवे, पोस्ट और सेना की ऑर्डिनेंस फैक्टरी के कर्मचारी शामिल हैं। अगर रेलवे कर्मचारी भी इस हड़ताल में शामिल होते हैं तो ये 42 साल बाद पहला मौका होगा जब रेलवे कर्मचारी हड़ताल करेंगे। एनडीटीवी इंडिया से बात करते हुए ऑल इंडिया रेलवे मेंस फ़ेडरेशन के महामंत्री शिवगोपाल शर्मा ने कहा कि यह अब तक की सबसे ख़राब वेतन बढ़ोतरी है।

चेन्नई में सरकारी कर्मचारी बुधवार को ही वेतन आयोग की सिफारिशों के खिलाफ सड़क पर उतर आए। यह शुरुआत भर है। 32 लाख सरकारी कर्मचारियों के महासंघ ने 11 जुलाई से हड़ताल पर जाने का ऐलान किया है। इनमें रेलवे, पोस्ट और सेना की ऑर्डिनेंस फैक्टरी के कर्मचारी शामिल हैं।

वेतन आयोग ने निचले स्तर पर मूल वेतन में 14.27 फीसदी बढ़ोतरी की सिफ़ारिश की है, जो सत्तर साल में सबसे कम बताई जा रही है। औसतन बढ़ोतरी 23.55 फ़ीसदी तक मानी जा रही है। कर्मचारी संघ 18,000 रुपये के न्यूनतम वेतन को बढ़ाने की मांग कर रहा है। उसे मौजूदा पेंशन व्यवस्था भी नामंजूर है। हालांकि वित्त मंत्री का दावा है कि अगर कोई विसंगति है तो दूर की जाएगी।

(7वें वेतन आयोग की सिफारिशें कैबिनेट ने मंजूर की, 23 प्रतिशत से अधिक होगी कर्मचारियों की वेतन वृद्धि)