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After Sukma attack, CRPF set to overhaul anti-Naxal ops in Bastar

After Sukma attack, CRPF set to overhaul anti-Naxal ops in Bastar
File photo of CRPF personnel.

New Delhi, April 27  

The CRPF is set to overhaul its anti-Naxal operations in the south Bastar region of Chhattisgarh in the aftermath of one of the biggest attacks on the force in the state on Monday and a fresh offensive is expected to be launched soon.Twenty-five jawans of the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) were killed near Burkapal village of Sukma district in the ambush by Naxals on April 24 while 12 men of the paramilitary force were killed in an earlier attack near Bheji village in the same district on March 11.Two days after the Monday attack, the Centre is reported to have asked security forces on the ground to go on an “all-out offensive” against the Maoists and “show results in the next few weeks.”Acting Director General (DG) of the CRPF, Sudeep Lakhtakia said today that the latest attack has “naturally called for the revision of Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs)” in the naxal-hit areas.He said the force has decided to undertake new measures as it will continue to secure the road construction work that helps to bring development to the remote areas of central India.“We have decided to change the strategy. We have learnt some lessons. While I cannot go into the details, I can tell you that we will undertake re-deployment of our forces and will also enhance the quantity and quality of special counter-insurgency operations,” Lakhtakia told PTI, a day after he visited the ambush site in Burkapal village.The force will have to ensure that the enemy does not attempt any surprises on it. “We track and engage them well before,” he said.So, while half of the personnel will do road construction security and other similar tasks, the other half will do special counter-insurgency operations, the acting DG said.He said the new action plan of the force will be to effectively dominate the area.Lakhtakia, however, said in such operations where the troops have to be out in the open for long and the terrain is treacherous, the SOPs and strategies have to be “revised as and when required” and that is what they were doing.CRPF has deployed a total of 28 battalions in Chhattisgarh with ten of those in the Bastar region alone. A regular CRPF battalion comprises about 1,000 personnel.Lakhtakia said a preliminary analysis of the April 24 ambush spot indicated that the four sections of the CRPF men were separated by a distance of about 600-750 metres with bullets flying around.“The Naxals were tracking the troops… They attacked the men after deciding the time and place of the attack. They used human shields of local villagers,” he said, adding apparently the personnel were having their lunch when the first assault took place.“The sequence of the events will take some time to construct… An inquiry is already in progress and that will tell us more,” he said.Establishing if any violation of SOPs took place or any other lapses occurred will only come up after the inquiry is completed, he said.Lakhtakia said the reports that bodies of some jawans were mutilated were yet to be ascertained. — PTI


Capt Yadav to help sacked BSF jawan

Rewari, April 22

Former minister Capt Ajay Singh Yadav today called on sacked BSF jawan Tej Bahadur Yadav at his residence here and assured him of all sorts of succour in fighting a legal battle in court.“Since Tej Bahadur has been removed from service unconstitutionally, I have assured him of all help in his case,” he added.Meanwhile, Ved Prakash Vidrohi, chief of Gramin Bharat, a social organisation, termed the dismissal of Tej Bahadur as unconstitutional and said it would demoralise other Army personnel. — TNS


Why does India breed so many traitors? By by *_Major General Mrinal Suman*_

While studying Indian history in school days, one was repeatedly told that the foreign invaders resorted to ‘divide and rule’ policy to gain control over India. They were painted as unscrupulous schemers who exploited the simple, trusting and gullible Indians.
It is only at a much later stage that one realised the hollowness of the above assertion. The truth is that we are adept at producing hordes of traitors who revel in India’s ruin. Every victory of the foreign invaders was facilitated by the local collaborators who betrayed their kings for some devious reward or to settle personal scores. No fort was ever conquered without the infidelity of a trusted minister/commander.
Unfortunately, centuries of slavery has taught us nothing. We carry on spawning throngs of people who can stoop down to any level (even imperil national security) for their petty gains. Our leaders, media and intellectuals appear to have a single point agenda: how to generate innovative issues to keep the nation divided and embroiled in petty bickering and internal dissentions; and thereby impede progress and bring a bad name to the country. They abhor India’s rise. Let me elucidate.
First, the leaders: they are the fountainhead of all fissiparous tendencies. For them, vote bank politics take precedence over everything else. One does not have to be a visionary to predict the danger of abetting illegal migration from Bangladesh for garnering votes. But unscrupulous political leaders carry on unconcerned.
One hangs one’s head in shame when political leaders extend their support to a delinquent student leader who seeks destruction of India. Comparing him with martyr Bhagat Singh is by far the most perfidious act.
Perhaps, India is the only country that has an ignominious track record of producing Home Ministers who revelled in shaming the country. One concocted theories of saffron terrorism to please his party bosses. In so doing, he presented a convenient propaganda tool to Pakistan. Another Home Minister did the unthinkable. He declared a terrorist to be innocent in an affidavit to the court. The aim was to ensnare the opposition leaders in a false case. Sadly, India’s intelligence gathering apparatus suffered immense damage in the process.
When a leader declares ‘it’s safer to be a cow than to be a Muslim in India today’, he puts the whole country to shame. The world media flashes such headlines with sinister pleasure. India’s image takes a terrible beating. Just to score a brownie point against the government, he presents a convenient propaganda handle to the hostile forces. How low can a leader stoop!
Recently, a renowned advocate and a former law minister told a TV channel that shouting slogans for the destruction of the country is not debarred in the constitution. According to him, freedom of expression was of paramount importance. Even demand for secession (azadi) was justified. As the interview progressed, one was not only amazed by his perverted reasoning but also shocked to see the brazenness with which he was arguing. Survival of India appeared to be of no concern to him. One wondered if one was watching an Indian or a Pakistani channel.
Secondly, the media personnel: the less said the better. From their conduct, it appears that many of them are foreign plants and India means little to them. When a leading media house invited a vicious and remorseless enemy like General Pervez Musharraf and groveled before him, it marked the lowest depths of shamelessness to which journalism could sink. Instead of castigating him for the Kargil war, he was treated as a peace loving guest.
Both the electronic and the print media never report ‘positives’ about the country. Ugly India sells (a la ‘Slumdog Millionaire’); and not progressive India. Remember how a TV reporter failed to digest the popularity of Modi in the US and tried to incite the crowd with provocative remarks. But then they get paid to demean India, and not to extol it.
Immense damage is also being inflicted on the unity of the country by the media through its Machiavellian and skewed reporting. Every news item is deliberately reported with a religious, caste or creed slant – ‘a dalit girl molested in a Delhi bus’ (as if other women are not molested in Delhi buses) or ‘church guard killed’ (in reality an argument between two security guards had turned violent) or ‘Muslim driver runs over a boy’ (as if his being a Muslim is of any relevance). Recently, in a case of cattle stealing, a leading newspaper could not resist the temptation to add that ‘one of the five thieves is learnt to have had connections with a cow protection group in the past’. How cunningly, a simply case of robbery was given a communal taint.
Petty vandals are given the coverage befitting a mass leader. It was obnoxious to see two TV channels airing their interviews with a student leader charged with sedition. The worst was the indulgent demeanour of the TV anchors; as if a national hero was being eulogised. The interviews were repeatedly telecast at prime time. Did these channels think of interviewing war heroes or martyrs’ families? Forget it; that would have been a pro-India act and that is an act of sacrilege for them.
Thirdly, the self-proclaimed secular intelligentsia: it has done the maximum damage to India’s prestige and standing. Some of them appear to be fifth columnists masquerading as progressive intellectuals. In which country of the world would the intelligentsia write to the US government not to receive their Prime Minister? Honestly, it is simply loathsome: duly elected representative of 1.25 billion Indians being subjected to indignities by a shameless bunch of foreign-educated and foreign-paid anti-national elements. Unfortunately, their protests get huge publicity abroad, thereby undermining all efforts to raise India’s standing in the world forum.
It can be said with certainty that the well-orchestrated campaign of intolerance was totally malicious in intent. The sole objective was to stall all progressive reforms by tarnishing the image of the government. How else can anti-nationalism be defined? As expected, having dented India’s reputation, sold-out media chose to ignore the true facts as they emerged.
Hundreds of Christians, led by the church leaders, marched in protest on the roads of Delhi against the alleged vandalism of churches and a theft in a Christian school. Routine cases of petty crimes were cited to suggest an anti-minority conspiracy. They ensured extensive coverage of their protests by the foreign and Indian media, thereby damaging India’s secular image. Foreign channels are only too eager to shame India. Unwisely, even Obama got carried away with his uncalled for advice, losing considerable goodwill in India. Reportedly, he said so on the prodding of an Indian leader.
Soldiers and the national symbols: the national flag, the national anthem and the national salutations are representative of a country’s national identity and pride. They symbolise ancient heritage, current challenges and future aspirations. For soldiers, their sanctity is incontestable.
Thousands of soldiers have sacrificed their lives to plant our tricolour on the enemy strongholds, thereby earning the ultimate honour of having their bodies draped in the national flag.
Notes of the national anthem make every soldier get goose pimples. The response is instantaneous and the effect is electrifying. Even in their homes, they stand up with their families when the national anthem is played on TV during Independence/Republic Day ceremonies.
Similarly, national salutations like ‘Hindustan Zindabad’, ‘Jai Hind’ and ‘Bharat Mata Ki Jai’ make adrenalin surge through their bodies. The salutations act as a rallying call to inspire the soldiers for the ultimate sacrifice. All military functions conclude with full-throated renditions of ‘Bharat Mata Ki Jai’.
Therefore, the current controversy regarding national salutations is highly painful to the soldiers. They fail to understand as to how an Indian can have difficulty in hailing the country. How can ‘Bharat Mata Ki Jai’ be assigned religious overtones.
Finally: history stands testimony to the fact that a nation infested with the virus of treachery, deceitfulness and perfidy has always been an easy prey for foreign subjugation. No one knows this bitter truth better than India. Yet, our leaders, media and intelligentsia keep discrediting and harming the country through their seditious utterances and activities. Under the garb of freedom of speech, they support those felonious speakers who vow not to rest till India is destroyed.
When Paris was hit by the terrorist attacks, the whole country gave a unified response. Compare it with our Batla House encounter against Indian Mujahdeen where two terrorists were killed and two arrested. A brave police officer lost his life. Yet, many seditious elements had the impudence to term the encounter to be ‘fake’.
Therefore, the mystery remains unsolved. Why does India continue to produce so many Jaichand and Mir Jafars? Is India a cursed nation or is treachery a part of our DNA? One wonders.*****

Income Tax dept launches ‘Op Clean Money’-II; to probe 60,000 people

Income Tax dept launches ‘Op Clean Money’-II; to probe 60,000 people
Undisclosed income of Rs 9,334 crore was detected between November 9, 2016 and February 28 this year. iStock

New Delhi, April 14The Income Tax department will investigate over 60,000 individuals under the second phase of the ‘Operation Clean Money’ which was launched on Friday with a view to detecting black money generation post demonetisation.The Central Board of Direct Taxes (CBDT), policy-making body of the department, said it had detected undisclosed income of over Rs 9,334 crore between November 9, 2016 and February 28 this year.The note ban was announced by Prime Minister Narendra Modi on November 8 last year.

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“More than 60,000 people, including 1,300 high-risk ones, have been identified for investigation into claims of excessive cash sales during the demonetisation period. More than 6,000 transactions of high value property purchase and 6,600 cases of outward remittances shall be subjected to detailed investigations (under Operation Clean Money II).“All the cases where no response is received shall also be subjected to detailed enquiries,” the CBDT said.A senior officer said advanced data analytics had been used to identify suspect cash deposits before launching the latest edition of the operation.As part of the first phase of the ‘Operation Clean Money’, launched on January 31 this year, the department had sent online queries and investigated 17.92 lakh people out of which 9.46 lakh people had responded to the department. PTI


China takes credit for rescuing cargo ship, ignores Indian Navy’s role

China takes credit for rescuing cargo ship, ignores Indian Navy’s role
An Indian Navy helicopter, launched from the INS Mumbai, had provided air cover to the distressed merchant vessel. Photo courtesy: Twitter handle of @indiannavy

Beijing, April 10

China on Monday claimed full credit for rescuing a cargo ship hijacked by Somali pirates in the strategic Gulf of Aden, ignoring Indian Navy’s role in the operation.

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While a Chinese Navy statement on Sunday night omitted any reference to the Indian Navy in providing helicopter cover to the Chinese ship whose special forces boarded the Tuvaluan ship under hijack, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Hua Chunying said the operation demonstrated “effectiveness of the Chinese naval force in the field of fighting against pirates”.

When questioned about the absence of any mention of the Indian Navy’s role in the operation, Hua said China’s Ministry of Defence should be approached for details.

“According to what we have learnt from the military on April 8 at 5 am, the 25th convoy of Chinese Navy which was conducting the escort mission in the Gulf of Aden in Somali waters received reports from the UKMTO (United Kingdom Marine Trade Operation) about the hijack of Tuvalaun ship OS35,” she said.

“The fleet vessel Yulin set out for the area immediately and rescue operation started early morning on April 9. Under the cover of helicopters, special force members of the Navy boarded the ship and rescued 19 (Filipino) crew members on broad. Both the ship and the crew members are safe now,” she told reporters.

Hua did not mention the assistance the Indian Navy provided to the Chinese Navy in the operation.

Her comments came a day after the People’s Liberation Army Navy (PLAN) said in a statement that it rescued the ship.

When asked about the Chinese Navy’s statement, Indian Navy spokesperson in New Delhi referred to his tweet, “Indian Navy Chetak Helicopter on top of PLA Navy boats carrying boarding party to MV OS35 in coordinated anti piracy ops @SpokespersonMoD”.

He also posted a picture which showed an Indian helicopter flying over a Chinese Navy vessel.

The surprise omission of Indian Navy’s role in the operation comes as the Indian Navy in New Delhi said that the navies of the two countries worked in a well-coordinated operation to rescue the vessel.

However, Hua, without detailing what cooperation she referred to, said, “We always remain positive towards international cooperation in combating pirates. We are ready for more cooperation in this regard.”

Asked about the Indian Navy’s role, she said “I have already given what I have learnt to you. The Chinese convoy received a report from the UKMTO and conducted rescue operation. With regards to details I point you to the Chinese Defence Ministry.”

The Indian Navy on Sunday said it sent its frontline warships, the INS Mumbai and INS Tarkash, to coordinate with the Chinese Navy. The two Indian ships were in the region as part of an overseas deployment.

At the end of the operation, the Chinese Navy thanked the Indian Navy for its role in the operation. “In a show of international maritime cooperation against piracy, a boarding party from the nearby Chinese navy ship went on board the merchant ship, while the Indian naval helicopter provided air cover for the operation. It has been established that all 19 Filipino crew members are safe,” Indian Navy spokesperson Capt D K Sharma said on Saunday.

The reported coordination among the navies came amid a strain in ties between the two countries over a range of issues, including the Dalai Lama’s visit to Tawang in Arunachal Pradesh, China’s opposition to India’s NSG membership and Beijing blocking India’s effort to declare JeM chief Masood Azhar as global terrorist by the UN. — PTI


China ignores India’s role in ship rescue

Beijing, April 10

China today claimed full credit for rescuing a cargo ship hijacked by Somali pirates in the strategic Gulf of Aden, ignoring Indian Navy’s role in the operation.While a Chinese navy statement last night omitted reference to the Indian Navy in providing helicopter cover to the Chinese vessel whose special forces boarded the Tuvaluan ship under hijack, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Hua Chunying said the operation demonstrated “effectiveness of the Chinese naval force in fighting pirates”.On the absence of any mention of the Indian Navy’s role in the operation, Hua said China’s Ministry of Defence should be approached for details.“According to what we have learnt from the military on April 8 at 5 pm, the 25th convoy of Chinese navy received reports from the UKMTO about the hijack of Tuvalaun ship OS35,” she said. — PTIIndian Navy posts pic Asked about the Chinese navy’s statement, an Indian Navy spokesperson  referred to his tweet, “Indian Navy Chetak Helicopter on top of PLA Navy boats carrying boarding party to MV OS35 in coordinated anti-piracy ops @SpokespersonMoD”He also posted a picture with the tweet which showed an Indian helicopter flying over a Chinese navy vessel


3 held for selling CSD products

Ambala, April 7

The Ambala police have arrested three men for stealing and selling products related to the Canteen Stores Department of the Indian Army in the open market.The accused have been identified as Mahender Rao, Amarnath and Dilip Kumar. They were produced before a local court today that sent them to judicial custody till April 21.The police said there was information that products from a CSD depot were being stolen and sold in the open market. Acting on a tip-off, a naka was set up near the Railway hospital chowk on Thursday. During inspection, a four-wheeler was stopped and the products were seized.Driver Mahender Rao, helper at a CSD depot Dilip and storekeeper Amarnath were arrested. Mahender Rao is a resident of Uttar Pradesh while the other two accused are residents of Ambala Cantonment.The products include soaps, baby products, hair oil, shampoo, dish wash gels and cloth washing bars.The cost of products is said to be over Rs 1 lakh. The shopkeeper to whom the consignment was to be delivered is yet to be arrested. The police are suspecting the involvement of some more people in the racket.DSP Suresh Kaushik said, “It is a serious issue and all people involved in this racket will be arrested. The accused shopkeeper has been identified and he will be arrested soon”. — TNS


Bodies of 3 soldiers recovered from avalanche site; Jhelum waters recede

Bodies of 3 soldiers recovered from avalanche site; Jhelum waters recede
A man evacuates children in a boat from the flooded Rajbagh area of Srinagar on Friday. Tribune Photo: Amin War

Azhar Qadri

Tribune News Service

Srinagar, April 7

Three soldiers buried under an avalanche in the remote Batalik sector near the Line of Control were found dead on Friday as the flood threat in the Valley receded with a pause in the downpour.An Army spokesman said the three soldiers, who were buried under an avalanche which hit their post in the Batalik sector yesterday, were found dead this morning as rescuers struggled against inclement weather and dug through 15 feet of snow to locate them.“Special teams braved inhospitable weather and worked through 15 feet of snow overnight. The bodies of three missing soldiers have been recovered,” the spokesman said.The three soldiers were among the five Army personnel manning a post in the Batalik sector, which was hit by an avalanche. While two soldiers were rescued immediately, three were missing as the Army launched rescue operating to locate them and pressed specially trained and equipped avalanche rescue teams into service.An unprecedented mid-spring snowfall and heavy rain had triggered a flood threat in the Kashmir valley and multiple avalanches in the Batalik and Kaksar sectors of Kargil district.The Jhelum river, which snakes through the Kashmir valley, and its tributaries had swollen as heavy precipitation continued for three days before registering a significant decrease today.The river’s water level crossed the ‘flood declaration’ level of 21 feet at Sangam in south Kashmir on Thursday evening, sparking panic in the region. The water level touched a high of 22.10 feet at Sangam at 4 am on Friday, a little short of the danger level of 23 feet before the waters began to recede.Residents across the Kashmir valley monitored the river’s level on an hourly basis, tuning to updates from the irrigation and flood control department.In south Kashmir’s Anantnag district, rescuers today found the body of a passenger who was travelling in a taxi which had skidded into a gushing stream yesterday in the Kokernag area. The deceased was identified as 35-year-old Mohammad Ashraf Chauhan while the taxi driver Riyaz Awan is still missing and search is on to locate him.As the downpour continued for three days, it also triggered landslides along the mountainous stretches of the Srinagar-Jammu highway and forced its closure.On Friday afternoon, the authorities were able to allow stranded vehicles to move towards the Kashmir valley as debris was cleared along several stretches.The state meteorological department in its forecast bulletin said the weather was likely to remain dry from Saturday with the possibility of light to moderate rainfall at few places in the region.(With inputs by Suhail A Shah from Anantnag and RK Kichlu from Ramban)


Guv condoles deathJammu: Governor NN Vohra on Friday expressed grief over the tragic death of three soldiers when an avalanche struck an Army post in the Batalik sector of Ladakh region. The Governor spoke to Lt Gen PJS Pannu, GOC, 14 Corps, and conveyed his sympathies to the bereaved families and wished the early recovery of the soldiers buried under snow who had been rescued.

Bodies of 3 soldiers trapped in avalanches recovered

SRINAGAR: Three soldiers trapped in an avalanche in Jammu and Kashmir’s Batalik were found dead on Friday. Multiple avalanches tore through Batalik sector on Thursday as the Valley reeled under unprecedented rain and snow.

WASEEM ANDRABI /HTThe water level in Jhelum had crossed the flood threshold of 18 feet on Thursday.Two civilians are also missing after a vehicle they were travelling in skidded off the road and fell into a stream in Anantnag district. Five other passengers were rescued.

The administration declared floods in Srinagar where the Jhelum’s water level rose alarmingly and shut education institutions for three days, officials said. Kashmir experienced rare snowfall in April with vast areas blanketed in white due to the freak weather phenomenon.

An army spokesperson said the heavy snowfall triggered multiple avalanches, burying one post in the Batalik sector. Two out of five trapped soldiers missing were rescued on Thursday.

Specially trained and equipped avalanche rescue teams were deployed for the operations in the area. Incessant rains also led to the closure of the Jammu-Srinagar national highway.

SOLDIERS PUSH AMBULANCE TO SAVE PREGNANT WOMAN

NEW DELHI: Abdul Aahad Khan was uncertain if his wife would live that night. He was uncertain about the fate of his unborn child.

As Kashmir battled rain, avalanche and heavy snowfall, a couple was on its way from Bandipore to a hospital in Srinagar. But, at 1.30am, the ambulance they were travelling in broke down. However, the driver of the ambulance showed presence of mind and decided to let the sirens blare.

Soon, troops from a Rashtriya Rifles battalion rushed to the spot and found the woman in a critical state. They began pushing the ambulance to get it started.

The soldiers pushed the vehicle for more than 500 metres and asked the driver to take an alternative route to Srinagar.

Some 12 hours later, Khan called up the company commander of SK Bala Army camp to inform him that his wife had been saved and had delivered a healthy baby boy.


Govt takes over Saragarhi gurdwara in Ferozepur, to hand it over to trust soon

Govt takes over Saragarhi memorial gurdwara

CHANDIGARH: The Punjab government has taken over the gurdwara built in 1924 by the Britishers in Ferozepur in memory of the martyrs of the Battle of Saragarhi, by reversing the January 5 order of the previous Akali-BJP government to hand over its control to Baba Lakha Singh of ‘Nanaksar Samparday’. The government now plans to hand over the gurdwara to the Saragarhi Memorial Management Trust.

HT FILE PHOTOTje Saragarhi memorial gurdwara that was built in 1924 at Ferozepur by the Britishers in appreciation of the supreme sacrifice of the Sikh soldiers.

The Akali-BJP government’s order had come a day after the poll code of conduct came into effect.

The development has taken at a time when a book, ‘Saragarhi and the defence of Samana forts’, penned by chief minister Capt Amarinder Singh is scheduled to be released on April 8.

Sources in the government said the decision was the result of the personal intervention of the CM. The trust came into existence in August 2006 during the previous tenure of Capt Amarinder Singh as CM. The trust was dissolved two years later in 2008 when the Akali-BJP government took over and handed over the control of the gurdwara to the district administration.

In 2009, Baba Lakha Singh started building a serai on the 8-acre land attached with the gurwara. “I had raised a hue and cry then also, saying Babaji be given some other land to build a serai. Gurdwara is a symbol of bravery,” Capt Amarjeet Singh Jaijee told HT, who was in the same regiment, to which the Saragarhi martyrs belonged.

As per reports, now, the government is making a foolproof trust deed so that the memorial stays with it permanently. The government has asked advocate general, Punjab, to draft the deed.

Capt Jaijee said he requested Baba Lakha Singh to give up the control of the memorial gurdwara, but he refused. “I told him that with the serai coming up, the martyrs’ name will fade away, which we don’t want. Two such memorials in Pakistan are standing unaltered,” Jaijee said.

STORY OF VALOUR

The battle of Saragarhi has been recognised by the UNESCO as one of the fiercest battles ever fought. It was on September 12, 1897, that 21 soldiers of 36 Sikh Regiment (now 4th Sikh Batallion) laid down their lives fighting nearly 10,000 Afghan tribesmen in the North-West Frontier province, now Pakistan.

All the 21 soldiers were posthumously awarded the ‘Indian Order of Merit’, the highest gallantry award given by the then government and four memorials were built in their name — Saragarhi memorial gurdwara on Ferozepur-Hussainawala road, Darbar Sahib in Amritsar, and two in Pakistan, one on the Samana ridge where the battle was fought and another at Fort Lockhart in Baluchistan.

The memorial in Amritsar is managed by the Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee.

 

 

 

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How ‘Brown Bag Lunches’ Whet Appetite For Leadership Ideas by Lt Gen Syed Ata Hasnain

How ‘Brown Bag Lunches’ Whet Appetite For Leadership Ideas

SNAPSHOT

Try ideation wherever you are and try Brown Bag Lunches. I have not found a better management practice for effective leadership and creation of a congenial environment for functioning and thinking.

I first came across the term ‘Brown Bag Lunch’ while attending the executive programme of the Asia Pacific Center for Security Studies, Honolulu, Hawaii in August 2000. It was a three-month programme designed to introduce middle level government officers (not necessarily uniformed) of countries within the US’ strategic circle to various vistas of comprehensive security of the Asia Pacific Region.

This was the pre-9/11 period and I was serving in Kashmir. The Americans did not have much of an idea of Jammu and Kashmir, nor of irregular warfare, had never heard of Improvised Explosive Devices and felt that Islamic fundamentalism (the term radicalism was introduced much later) was but a passing phase. There were four Pakistanis who were attending the programme with me; one each from the Pakistan Air Force (PAF) and Pakistan Army, an academic and a joint secretary from Pakistan’s Ministry of Defence (MoD).

The PAF and Army officers always received preferential treatment from the American servicemen. Whenever I warned the various participants (there were 80 people from 35 countries) about the impending dangers of Islamic fundamentalism, I was never taken seriously by the US establishment; even during one large international seminar on transnational terror. The only man who thought I was talking sense was the president (virtually the Commandant) of the Asia-Pacific Center for Security Studies (APCSS), Lieutenant General (retired) Hank Stackpole, an outstanding Marine Corps General.

One good day, as good as any in sunny Hawaii, I was called up by the president’s staff officer to convey the General’s invitation for Brown Bag Lunch during the lunch hour the next day to discuss Jammu and Kashmir and Islamic fundamentalism. It was to be a one-on-one discussion, but in the excitement of having been invited for the lunch, I forgot to ask the staff officer what was meant by Brown Bag Lunch.

I arrived at the appointed hour carrying my little plastic bag containing the usual paraphernalia of stationery so the staff officer did not ask me any questions. He ushered me into the president’s office, where the lean and very intellectual General was already sitting on the sofa, awaiting my arrival. Lunch was open before him; a sandwich and an apple. I wondered what I would be eating. After some small talk the General asked me whether I would like to open my lunch packet before we got down to discussing the subjects he was interested in. I was not sure I heard correctly, but gathering my wits, I said I had carried no lunch with me because I thought he had invited me for lunch.

The General was more than amused. “Didn’t they tell you, it was to be Brown Bag Lunch”, he said.

“They did, but I am not sure I understood what that means, neither do I understand what it means even now”, I replied.

The General burst out laughing. “Oh, that is American for having a shared lunch; you bring yours and I bring mine”, he blurted between his laughs.

“I am sorry, in my country an invitation for a meal means only the host brings the meal,” was my forthright reply.

That afternoon both General Stackpole and I went hungry having eaten half a sandwich and half an apple each but the tone and content of the discussion made up for all the loss. I told him that I was writing my dissertation on Islamic fundamentalism and my research told me that the Americans were getting it all wrong by kowtowing to the Pakistan Army, and not ensuring that the fundamentalist groups in Pakistan and Afghanistan were isolated and weeded out.

He was a little surprised hearing this from me, a Muslim, and said so in so many words. I had to explain that I was a soldier and attached nothing to my personal faith; it was only my professional orientation I was bringing to my analysis, but exploiting also my knowledge of the faith. He thanked me and asked me to submit a separate copy of my dissertation to his office, for him to read.

The programme was to end on 15 September 2000 and I was traveling to San Francisco and then the Mid-West on mainland US to be with family. I ensured that a copy of my badly typed dissertation was formatted by a local computer instructor (I was yet a novice at handling computers), refined for presentation and then submitted to General Stackpole’s office. The date of submission which can never leave my memory, was a date now etched in the world’s memory. It was 9/11, only the year was different. It was 11 September 2000, exactly 365 days before the world changed after the Twin Tower attack.

But that is not the end. It started with Brown Bag Lunches and must end with that. As the Military Secretary (MS) of the Indian Army in 2012-13, I was on the lookout for new practices for taking my branch to a much higher level of efficiency and functioning. I was one of the world’s largest human resource managers, managing a cadre of 40,000 officers.

Many new ideas were being tried, mostly based on thoughts of middle level officers. To keep the adrenaline flowing and allowing open ended intake of ideas, I introduced the Brown Bag Lunch system. One Colonel, Lt Col or Major of the branch would join me for lunch from 1pm to 1.30pm at my office. He brought his lunch, I brought mine; I benefited from the culinary skills of the MS branch wives, who ensured their husbands always carried some novelties; mine was a simpler lunch.

Meals apart, I have never had richer and more fruitful discussion on professional matters than during these sessions. We discussed affairs of the MS branch and of the Indian Army in general. The last five minutes were spent on generic issues. A notebook and pen was within easy reach for me to take down the wealth of thoughts I received.

These were my able subordinates, who I would perhaps meet only collectively and never one on one; Brown Bag Lunch had created the opportunity. Five ideas from the discussion were noted and later compiled for our conferences where all could analyse them. Some ideas were taken to conclusion and some others taken up for deeper study.

This is the world of ideation; if you do not practise it in one form or the other you really may be a deficient leader because one brain can never think of the range of ideas which are required for problem solving. The entire Army could do with many more ideas. I have seen ideation dinners being conducted in institutions in London and held a few in my command of formations too.

Try ideation wherever you are and try Brown Bag Lunches. I have not found a better management practice for effective leadership and creation of a congenial environment for functioning and thinking.

I have to thank General Hank Stackpole and that wonderful American institution, APCSS, for having taught me this. But in hindsight I wish the very fine General had passed on my dissertation to the American President.