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Hundreds evacuated from snow-bound Lahaul valley

MC Thakur

MANALI, NOVEMBER 23

Hundreds of people were evacuated from the snow-bound Lahaul valley in over 100 vehicles today after the Border Roads Organisation (BRO) cleared snow from the Manali-Rohtang-Keylong highway yesterday.As many as 112 vehicles crossed the rescue post at Koksar village in the Lahaul valley till 1 pm.As the road is covered with a thick layer of snow due to extreme cold conditions, many vehicles got stuck mid-way and had to be pulled out by the BRO’s vehicles.Border Roads Task Force Commander Colonel AK Awasthi said 112 vehicles had gone to Manali from Lahaul. “The road surface is slippery and risky for vehicles. To ensure the smooth movement of vehicles, we are allowing one-way traffic. Vehicles from Lahaul were allowed to cross Rohtang and vehicles from Manali will cross Rohtang on Friday,” he said.The Commander said it was not an easy task to clear the road within a record time as severe cold and blizzards were the main challenge. “Even machines do not work in such weather. At some stretch, we had to clear up to 4-ft snow. We had engaged snow cutters, four dozers and three JCB machines from Koksar and Marhi sides,” he added.Awasthi further added that the highway had been officially closed on November 15 but the BRO had cleared snow only to facilitate residents of the Lahaul valley.The residents travel between Lahaul and Kullu to stock essentials before heavy snowfall cuts off the valley from Kullu.He also said BRO officials would conduct a joint recce of Rohtang with Kullu and Lahaul-Spiti administration to see the conditions and decide if road should be closed to traffic. He said they would not clear snow from Rohtang if another spell of snow blocked it as it was not safe.Vehicles from Manali move today

  • As many as 112 vehicles crossed the rescue post at Koksar village in the Lahaul valley till 1 pm today
  • As the road is covered with thick layer of snow, many vehicles got stuck in the mid-way which were pulled out by the BRO’s vehicles
  • Vehicles from Manali will cross Rohtang to Lahaul on Friday
  • BRO officials will conduct a  joint recce of Rohtang with Kullu and Lahaul-Spiti administration to decide if road should be closed to traffic

 


Army cites price difference, moves pvt vendors for uniforms

Vijay Mohan

Tribune News Service

Chandigarh, November 19

The Army Headquarters’ move to source fabric for its combat uniforms from the private sector, ostensibly due to the huge price differential between the uniforms procured from the state-run Ordnance Factory and those available locally, has Ordnance Factory employees up in arms.The employees are claiming that samples of cloth available with private vendors have failed the requisite quality tests.The Master General of Ordnance (MGO) at the Army Headquarters had written to the Additional Director General, Ordnance Factories Board, earlier this month that the Army would not like to procure combat uniforms from the Ordnance Factory. It instead wants that a no-objection certificate be issued for procuring uniforms from private vendors.“A set of combat jacket and trousers provisioned through the Ordnance Factory costs Rs 4,150 where as a combat uniform of the same material stitched locally costs Rs 1,800-1,900, including GST.“If procured in the same volume as is being done from Ordnance Factory, it is likely to cost Rs 1,200-1,300 per set,” the MGO’s letter states.The Army had switched to a new combat uniform over a decade ago to standardise the camouflage pattern and check misuse and open sale of such cloth in the market.The four-colour disruptive pattern of the cloth, called Army Logo Cloth, is inter spread with the Army’s crossed swords and Ashoka Lion logo.The camouflage design and fabric specifications were developed by the Ordnance Factory. Some private mills have been contracted to produce Army Logo Cloth for the Ordnance Factory, which supplies stitched uniform to the Army. Though the sale of this pattern by mills to private vendors is restricted, it is available in the market. Once the cloth is received from the mills, it undergoes 36 tests to ensure quality standards.In a letter written to Chief of the Army Staff this week, the All-India Defence Employees Federation has said that if the Army starts purchasing cloth directly from private vendors, there is no guarantee that these standards would be met.The letter states that Ordnance Factory employees purchased several samples of Army Logo Cloth from different shops in Delhi Cantonment and all samples failed chemical as well as physical tests.The letter adds the Ministry of Defence has assured Ordnance Factory employees that combat uniform would not be declared a “non-core” item and there was no justification for the MGO seeking a no-objection certificate.

Seeks NOC from Ordnance Factories Board

  • A set of combat jacket and trousers provisioned through the Ordnance Factory costs Rs 4,150 where as a combat uniform of the same material stitched locally costs Rs 1,800-1,900, including GST
  • If procured in the same volume as is being done fromOrdnance Factory, it is likely to cost Rs 1,200-1,300 per set

HEADLINES::::04 NOV 2017

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  • WHY OROP IS IMPORTANT FOR EX-SERVICEMEN BY COL DABBY S DE MELLO (RETD)
  • FOR WOMEN IN UNIFORM:::MAI BHAGO ARMED FORCES PREPARATORY INSTITUTE
  • “CIVIL-MILITARY RELATIONS: LET’S NOT WEAKEN THE CORPORATE CHARACTER OF OUR FORCES BY *LT GEN (RETD) DS HOODA*
  • THE DIGNITY OF A ‘FALLEN’ SOLDIER BY LT GENERAL BHOPINDER SINGH
  • DIVIDE OVER THE ARMY BUILDING BRIDGES IN MUMBAI REFLECTS STATE OF CIVIL-MILITARY RELATIONS BY LT GEN ATA HUSNAIN
  • THE INDIAN ARMY SHOULD NOT BE USED TO BUILD BRIDGES IN MUMBAI
  • BATTLE OF CHHAMB:WAS THE CEASEFIRE PREMATURE?
  • 80 MILITANTS KILLED IN SOUTH KASHMIR IN 6 MONTHS: ARMY
  • TWO SOLDIERS DIE IN PULWAMA GUNFIGHT BJP’S YOUTH WING LEADER IN SHOPIAN FOUND DEAD, DIG BLAMES MILITANTS
  • 1999 HERO MAJOR PURUSHOTTAM REMEMBERED
  • TRIBUTES PAID TO FIRST PARAM VIR CHAKRA AWARDEE
  • RISING DEBT-TRAP DEMONETISATION SPURRED CREDIT CARD TRAP
  • ARMY CORRECTS A SELF-GOAL NOW FIX OTHER ANOMALIES

Kharga Corps pays tribute to martyrs

AMBALA: To mark ‘infantry day’, Kharga Corps Commander General JS Negi on Friday laid wreath at the war memorial in cantonment and paid tributes to the martyrs who had laid their lives in the service of the nation.

HT PHOTO■ A Kharga Corps officer laying wreath at Vijay Samarak in Ambala Cantonment to mark infantry day on Friday.

An army release said the infantry is the largest component of the Indian Army and has been manning the most difficult borders ranging from Arunachal Pradesh to Jammu and Kashmir, by braving the most extreme weather and eating dehydrated rations.

The release said on infantry day, a battalion of 1 SIKH had landed in Srinagar in 1947 to protect the valley from Pakistani Raiders. Kashmir was won by the Indian Army by pushing back the Pakistanis across the most difficult terrains in the world. The line where the winning streak of the Indian Army was stopped due to a UN-declared ceasefire is what we call as the ‘Line-of-Control’ (LOC), the released said.


GURDASPUR LOK SABHA BYELECTION: JAKHAR ALL THE WAY Victory proves Cong back on track: Capt

Tribune News Service

Chandigarh, October 15

Chief Minister Capt Amarinder Singh today said the stupendous victory in the Gurdaspur Lok Sabha byelection “is a precursor of the revival of the Congress at the national level”.Comparing the poll results to the Chikmagalur victory of former Prime Minister Indira Gandhi, which marked the revival of the Congress in the late 1970s, Amarinder said the results underlined the downfall of the BJP that had been fuelled by the adverse impact of the GST and demonetisation.“The results will strengthen the party’s upward trend which began with the win in various university student union elections, Maharashtra civic polls and Kerala bypoll,” said Amarinder.Crediting Sunil Jakhar and party MLAs and workers for the victory, the CM said it reaffirmed anti-Akali sentiments, especially in Gurdaspur, where victory margin was much higher.In the Assembly constituencies falling in Pathankot district, he attributed the Rajput factor for comparatively lesser margins for the Congress. The only exception was the BJP bastion, Sujanpur, where senior Congress leader Brahm Mohindra was camping. Aiming at AAP, the CM said the vote share of the party had come down to 2 per cent. He pointed out that AAP’s Sucha Singh Chhotepur polled 1,73,376 votes in the 2014 Lok Sabha elections and the same party could manage 23,579 votes, with its candidate even losing his security deposit.

Rewarding MLAs?

On Cabinet expansion after the Gurdaspur bypoll as was announced by him, the CM said he would discuss the matter with AICC vice-president Rahul Gandhi. A senior leader, however, said the expansion would take place only after Rahul’s elevation as the party president. On Cabinet berth to Dera Baba Nanak MLA Sukhjinder Randhawa from whose segment the party got the highest margin, Amarinder said: “I had promised him dinner on getting highest margin. Now, I will invite him to dinner.”

No vendetta, CM reiterates

Amarinder said he would prefer the anti-drug STF to investigate and take suitable action against all guilty once the probe was completed, indicating that he would now tow the line of acting against Akalis in the drugs case. MLAs from Gurdaspur, led by Randhawa, had been seeking action against Akalis whose names had cropped up in the drugs case. Similarly for the sacrilege incident, Justice Ranjit Singh Commission was doing its job, the CM said.

What they said…

The victory has reaffirmed people’s faith in Capt Amarinder and his policies. I promise to raise in Parliament issues such as the GST, unemployment and incentives to industry on par with hill states. Skill development will be taken up on a priority to tackle unemployment. — Sunil Jakhar, PPCC president People have not voted for the Congress, but for Jakhar and his clean image… Moreover, the ruling party usually wins the bypoll. The Congress has come to power in the state just seven months ago and it should not take the win as a certificate of its performance. Shahnawaz Hussain, BJP spokespersonWe are not surprised by the victory of Congress candidate, keeping in view the blatant misuse of government machinery. A mere 56 per cent polling proves that the government had already ensured the victory of its candidate.— Prem Singh Chandumajra, SAD spokesman and MPWe accept that it is the failure of the AAP state unit. It is time for introspection and to stop indulging in blame game. — Baljinder Kaur, AAP legislator


Denuded izzat by Lt Gen Bhopinder Singh

The “muscle-memory” and emotions of the Indian defence forces belie the mainstream perception of a stoic, regimented exterior that is often misunderstood for the lack of independent opinions or sentiments. Strategic restraint is a well-understood military doctrine within the forces; it entails a certain institutional silence on matters that are beyond the professional calling.

However, the asymmetric challenges of the 21st century mandates a combatant, who is more holistic and can think through the layers of environmental issues and contexts that impact his operational duties, albeit without expressing a political point of view.

But hypernationalistic sentiments are threatening the insulated ‘barracks’ with the increasing political appropriation of the image of the soldier, intrusions into personnel matters, and with the expansive and creative (mis)usages of the defence forces. This is threatening the essence, conscience and the agnosticism of an essentially apolitical entity. Certain intangible dimensions are drilled at the altar of baptism, in the training institutions ~ the hallowed Chetwodian codes, ‘turn-out’, ‘service before self’ etc. are inescapable clichés that offer no way out, other than walking-the-talk.

The definitive leitmotif and premium is on the izzat of the uniform that finds expression in the minus 40 degree C Siachen glacier, when a soldier from Chennai cries out, Veera Madrassi, Adi Kollu, Adi Kollu (Brave Madrassi, Hit and Kill, Hit and Kill), when attacking and avenging the izzat of a fallen soldier.

No danger is calculated in the military-mathematics of upholding honour. Yet, despite the nominally ‘casteist’ or regional denominations of the various Infantry regiments, the refrain of any unit is ‘nation first’ ~ first, foremost, and always. Izzat to the national flag and then to the regimental or a unit identity, surmounts all logic and can verge on reckless courage.

Or else, the heroics of the Kargil daredevilry, are inexplicable to the common man. Unknown to even the soldiers themselves is the moral conviction alluded to by the irrepressible American General, George Patton (‘Blood and Guts’) who said, “The highest obligation and privilege of citizenship is that of bearing arms for one’s country”. This belief in the national ‘call to honour’ ensures the blunt kinetic abilities, steely professional conduct and the silent-mode, when accepting any ‘order’.

The constitutional switchboard of the Indian system reaffirms the civilian government’s control over the military. This framework is understandable given the genealogical emergence of India, and the throbbing impulses of ‘democracy’ and ‘liberalism’ that rightfully ensure the subordination of the military vis-à-vis the larger policy and framework, to that of the civilian authority.

The political innocence and the romantic notions of subordinating the military were almost immediately exposed with the Indo-Pak war of 1947-48, which exposed the bloody shortcomings of Partition, that have festered since. India was wounded at birth. And yet, it initially remained politically idealistic and naïve, and thus tentative and wary of the relevance for the Armed Forces, despite the external threats.

The insulation of the treelined cantonments suited the political dispensations and the Armed Forces mutually as it allowed the requisite space and confinement to usher in the golden era of ‘cantonment soldiering’. This passive disinterest in the affairs of the military did result in ‘letting the guard down’, and along with the political misjudgment on China, the inevitability of 1962 followed.

Preceding the insult of 1962, were sure signs of a dangerous drift from a professional ‘nononsense’ approach to a ‘commune’ culture that accepted and rewarded senior officers for undertaking initiatives like building housing projects, debunking military concerns as alarmist, political choices in appointments etc. ~ all diluting the operational rectitude and immutability of soldering. Unsurprisingly, the civilian bureaucrats were complicit accomplices to the ‘secondement’ of the Armed Forces, prior and after the wake-up call of 1962. That year was internalised and personalised for posterity by the Armed Forces.

The uniformed fraternity marvelled at the bravery of Major Shaitan Singh, Subedar Joginder Singh, Major Dhan Singh Thapa and many other unsung heroes who paid the price for Delhi’s apathy. Lessons were learnt and the Chinese were paid back in the same coin in 1967 at Nathu La and Cho La, while Pakistan suffered setbacks in 1965 and 1971. Since then, the inverted flags of the enemy are showcased in the officers’ messes and museums of the Armed Forces, lest anyone overlooks the symbolism and the memory of battle honours.

The institution survives on symbolism ~ a soldier salutes the flag on the bonnet and not the individual inside the vehicle. The newly recruited soldier takes pride in the gallantry of his battalion in such places as Mesopotamia, Haifa and Abyssinia.

The symbolisms are ingenious, composite and inclusive, without compromising on the spiritual tenets of the idea of India. There is no dissonance or dichotomy in owning their colonial origins (e.g. Hodson Horse) or any oddity in celebrating the braveheart Major Mukund Varadarajan as a quintessential ‘Rajput Officer’, or indeed, Lt Ram Prakash Roperia as a ‘Madrasi officer’. Each arm and uniform reveres the chastity of their function ~ the Gunners are the ‘Gods of War’, and the Parachute (Special Forces) truly believe that ‘Men apart, each man emperor’! Such aphorisms make the Indian soldier invincible in Doklam, in front of a numerically unequal and ostensibly the largest military in the world.

Therefore, uncomfortable whispers abound, not when the soldier is stretched to his physicalhuman limits in the battleground, but when a Defence Minister takes the salute in a sloppy slipper! The taint on the institutional ethos and correctitude is both blasphemous and unpardonable, while any call to defend the flag is regarded, irrespective of the price, as an ‘order’ received, and is considered to be a ‘commitment’ that is a given.

Unfortunately, the behavioural ethos has been conveniently undermined for administrative, civic, and now even political ends. The unflagging institutional efficacy is perversely its own undoing. The slide of Izzat persists under all political dispensations.

From the laying of yoga mats to building pontoons for godmen and now the churlish suggestions to use soldiers for clean-up of filth is unimaginable. Such activity can take its toll in emotional terms.

The army as an institution has never shirked or fussed over the quantum of work or the intensity of dangers involved in carrying out any ‘orders’. The soldier has almost inevitably become the last man standing to cover up the institutional failures of other administrative entities. The ‘ramrod straight’ posture is still maintained despite the ignominy of OROPs, indignities of subsequent Pay Commissions, shortage of personnel, and slides in the warrant of precedence. Such problems can have a damaging effect on izzat, indeed the heart soul and spirit of the institution.

The ‘guard must never be lowered’, and the risk stems from the ignorance and/or insufficient understanding of the institutional values, condescending vacuities or worse, deliberate chicanery. The deficiencies of quality and quantity of equipment and manpower are still surmountable, but it is cause for alarm if the ethos, pride, izzat and symbols of professionalism are compromised.

(The writer IS Lt Gen PVSM, AVSM (Retd), Former Lt Governor of Andaman & Nicobar Islands & Puducherry)


With 500 Soldiers On Guard, China Expands Road In Doklam

Thwarted in its last attempt, China has now shifted its unused road construction material North and East of the Doklam face-off site.

http://

NEW DELHI: 

HIGHLIGHTS

  1. China starts expanding road in disputed Doklam Plateau
  2. 500 soldiers accompanying construction workers
  3. New construction in same area that India holds highly sensitive

Barely a month after the winding down of an aggressive stand-off with India at the Sikkim border, the Chinese army is back to building a road on the Doklam Plateau, just 10 km from the location of the last conflict. The Doklam Plateau is claimed by both Beijing and Bhutan as their territory. India backs Bhutan’s clai

doklam road construction google earth 650

In mid-June, Indian soldiers crossed the Sikkim border to stop the construction of a Chinese road near the “Chicken’s Neck”, a thin strip that links India to its northeastern states. After nearly 70 days of soldiers from both sides staring down at each other just 150 metres apart, the conflict, described as the worst in decades, subsided with both countries accepting that they were withdrawing their troops, though details were sketchy.

China pulled back its bulldozers and other road-making equipment, said officials in Delhi at the time. Chinese officers said the weather would be among the factors that would determine its plans for construction.

Now, barely 10 kilometres from the location of the stand-off, China is expanding an existing track, reinforcing its claim to the disputed and remote Doklam Plateau. India backs Bhutan’s claim to the region and has made it clear that it will not tolerate any infrastructure that would allow China access to the Chicken’s Neck, located just south of Doklam.

Thwarted in its last attempt, China has now shifted its unused road construction material North and East of the face-off site. Road construction workers brought into the area are accompanied by upto 500 soldiers though there are no indicators that these soldiers will be permanently based in the area – the Chinese town of Yatung, which is less than 20 km away as the crow flies, is a few hours by road and accommodates them. Neither are there signs of permanent structures to accommodate Chinese soldiers in the area which is snow-bound and bitterly cold in the winter. Army officers NDTV has spoken to believe that the new road construction is meant to be a strong signal of Beijing’s intent to prove its territorial claims. A month ago, Army Chief Bipin Rawat had warned, “As far as the Northern adversary is concerned, flexing of muscles has started. Salami slicing, taking over territory in a very gradual manner, testing our limits or threshold is something we have to be wary about. Remain prepared for situations that are emerging gradually into conflict.”

doklam road construction google earth

Construction in the same area that India holds highly sensitive

It is likely that the Army Chief was referring to these renewed Chinese efforts despite the de-escalation of the Doklam crisis which paved the way for the Prime Minister to travel to Xiamen for the BRICS summit last month.

Sources have told NDTV that fresh Chinese road construction activity in the area began shortly after India and China chose to deescalate tensions on August 28. On August 18, the Indian Army, which dominates the area, moved into the Doklam Plateau from their base at the nearby Doka La (pass) and physically prevented the Chinese from stretching the track. China’s goal had been to extend the track south across the Torso Nallah to the Jhamperi Ridge, a dominant feature in the area where the Bhutanese Army has a base.

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Sluggishness in economy PM’s mid-course correction

Sluggishness in economy

PRIME Minister Narendra Modi strongly slammed the critics of gloom and doom in an elaborate defence of the economic situation, which shows that former Finance Minister Yashwant Sinha’s stinging attack on the government’s economic policies did not go in vain. However, his efforts to downplay the current recessionary trend through an hour-long speech could not adequately camouflage his anxiety over the sluggishness in the economy. In the process, he not only acknowledged that the economy had lost its growth momentum but even said he never claimed to be an economist. These concessions are a tacit acceptance of some reform decisions failing to fire as intended and the willingness of the PM to undertake a mid-course correction.  The PM’s admission that the economy needs special attention is not sufficient. He must look beyond data and numbers cited chapter and verse by him. Higher inflow of foreign investments and a robust performance by the automobile sector are, at best, positive indications but not quite enough. There is no doubt that much more needs to be done to overcome the impact of demonetisation and GST implementation. PM Modi’s assertion that the government is committed to reversing this downward trend raises hope for the poor who have been the hardest hit. Recently government data has posted a decline in fertiliser and cement output, which would imply poor performance of the real estate and farm segments, major employers of casual labourers.In order to shield the poor, the RBI has decided not to cut the interest rate, fearing that an increased supply of money would stoke inflation. One of the major reasons for its apprehensions is the deficient monsoon that threatens to aggravate the woes of farmers. Now, the ball is in the PM’s court and he needs to take definitive actions to stimulate the economy. The best way forward is to revive labour-intensive small and medium enterprises, which have been badly hit by demonetisation and GST. In his speech, the PM promised to help them. To do so, he must relax GST norms for SMEs until they fully adjust to the new system.

Democracy, ‘darr’ can’t go together, says defiant Sinha

Democracy, ‘darr’ can’t go together, says defiant Sinha
(From left) Congress leader Manish Tewari, BJP leader Yashwant Sinha and Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal during a book release function in New Delhi on Thursday. Tribune photo: Manas Ranjan Bhui

Smita Sharma

Tribune News Service

New Delhi, October 5

“The soul of democracy is consensus, it is simply not numbers. Even if you have numbers, you have to try and reach out to other people and try and take them along. Democracy and ‘darr’ (fear) do not go together,” said former Union Minister and senior BJP leader Yashwant Sinha at an event here today.In the eye of a political storm since his recent critique of Finance Minister Arun Jaitley and the government’s “economic mess”, Sinha remains defiant. He was speaking on the occasion of release of senior Congress leader Manish Tewari’s new book — Tidings of Troubled Times. On stage, the two shared space with Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal while dismissing off speculation of any political realignment.Central to their remarks was “Modinomics” and “atmosphere of fear”in the country. Kejriwal set the ball rolling with criticism of demonetisation and GST, throwing figures of job losses.“There is an atmosphere of fear that I have never seen before across the country. We do not know how many ED and I-T notices have been sent out. This is a ‘raid raj’ like never before,” said Kejriwal.Taking on his party, Sinha said the government tried pitting his son and minister Jayant against him to divert attention from real issues, but it failed else “a certain gentleman would not have spoken for an hour and fifteen minutes yesterday”, hinting at Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s speech yesterday.Without naming Modi, Sinha said he had been called ‘Shalya’ of Mahabharata, but it was only ‘Duryodhan’ and ‘Dushashan’ who were the most infamous brothers among the Kaurva clan. Sinha said he wouldn’t mind if party acted against him, though he had not done anything to deserve it.On the Opposition getting its act together, Manish Tewari reminded the audience, “Politics is all about probabilities and probabilities are eternal”. The Delhi CM claimed the “battle of 2019 will be BJP versus rest of the country”.


PUNJAB NEWS:::GURDASPUR BY ELECTIONS “””SPECIAL COVERAGE TILL ELECTIONS

Salaria has an immoral track record: AAP’s Khaira

GURDASPUR:Leader of opposition Sukhpal Singh Khaira on Thursday accused SAD-BJP candidate Swaran Salaria of having “an immoral track record” and indulging in corrupt practices to run the Chintpurni Medical College in Pathankot, owned by Salaria.

Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) candidate Major General Suresh Khajuria (retd) meeting a shopkeeper in Gurdaspur on Thursday.Khaira was in Dinanagar to address a public meeting in support of Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) candidate Major General Suresh Khajuria (retd) for the Gurdaspur Lok Sabha byelections.

Taking a dig at Salaria, Khaira said in December 2014, Salaria was booked under rape charges at Vakola police station in Mumbai, following allegations by an air hostess. The case has now been closed. “Salaria may have silenced the aggrieved woman with his money power but the case has brought out a villainous character of the BJP candidate,” Khaira said.

The AAP leader also accused Salaria of “spoiling” careers of “hundreds of youth” from Gurdaspur at his Chintpurni Medical College and Hospital. “The future of students from this college is hanging fire since 2011 after the Medical Council of India (MCI) refused to allow its operations, citing anomalies in its functioning.”

He added that despite the MCI’s observation, Salaria continued to admit students in 2014, 2015 and 2016. The Punjab and Haryana high court has recently ordered that these students should be shifted to other medical colleges in the state, Khaira said.

“With this, Salaria has not only embezzled crores from the students by offering them medical seats, but has also indulged in corrupt practices by cheating his own electorate,” he said.

Challenging Salaria for an open debate with Khajuria, Khaira said its difficult to understand how the people of Gurdaspur can trust a man with such “nefarious track record”.

Speaking on the Centre’s taxation policy, Khaira said the BJP must be taught a lesson for “discriminating against” the state’s industry.

He said that, “at the cost of Punjab”, the Modi government has extended the industrial tax holiday by 10 years for hill states like Himachal Pradesh and Jammu and Kashmir.

He claimed that more than 30,000 small and medium scale industrial units have either closed down or shifted out of Punjab because of the differential tax policies of successive central governments.

Meanwhile, he also took a dig at Congress candidate Sunil Jakhar and said after being rejected from Abohar assembly seat and Ferozpur Lok Sabha seat, he is aiming at his “political rehabilitation” through the Gurdaspur Lok Sabha byelection.

‘Sulking’ Bajwa to join campaign on October 1

CHANDIGARH: The Congress was never united in Gurdaspur. The rivalry among its political dynasties runs deep, from fathers to sons.

The Lok Sabha bypoll has once again redrawn the battle lines between Rajya Sabha MP Partap Singh Bajwa, who is also former Gurdaspur MP, and state rural development minister Tript Rajinder Bajwa; and Dera Baba Nanak MLA Sukhjinder Randhawa, a contender for a ministerial berth. The fathers of all three too were regional satraps of the Congress and the turf war is part of the legacy.

But as the six-month-old Captain Amarinder Singh government faces a daunting bypoll test, the absence of Partap Bajwa from the campaign scene may give the Congress candidate Sunil Jakhar’s camp some anxious moments.

Dovetailing compulsion with strategy, Jakhar’s campaign managers are projecting Bajwa’s younger brother, Fateh Jang, literally in the driver’s seat. Fateh drove Jakhar to file nomination papers and was one of the faces in the photo op along with Jakhar and the CM. Fateh is also campaigning for Jakhar in Qadian, the seat he now represents after Bajwa’s wife, Charanjit, made way for him in the February polls.

But as the campaign scene hots up at Gurdaspur, Bajwa is in New Delhi to meet top leadership of the party. The Rajya Sabha MP says he will join the campaign on October 1.

The BJP, which has been attacking Jakhar as an “outsider”, is also trying to cash in on the “lack of unity” in the Congress. State BJP chief Vijay Sampla on Thursday said Kavita (Vinod Khanna’s wife) was by the side of party’s candidate, Swaran Singh Salaria, when he filed the nomination papers and also at the rally. “But where is Congress former Gurdaspur MP Partap Bajwa. The Congress is still fighting over the candidate,” he said while talking to reporters in Pathankot. Kavita too had staked her claim for ticket to the Lok Sabha seat after her husband’s death in April.

Bajwa has claimed that he got tickets for six out of nine assembly candidates in Gurdaspur Lok Sabha (barring Sukhjinder, Tript and minister Aruna Chaudhary who represents Dinanagar seat), of whom five won. But with his once bête noire Amarinder as the CM, none of the sitting MLAs except his brother, Fateh, have openly supported the candidature of his wife.

While the Jakhar camp sees no alarm bells in Bajwa’s absence from the poll scene as all the seven Congress MLAs, including Fateh, are campaigning for the party nominee, Bajwa loyalists contend he cannot be overlooked on his home turf, as he has earlier secured wins for himself, wife, brother and some other MLAs and the 2014 Lok Sabha defeat was an exception to his winning spree.

Both the defeated candidates too, Bajwa claims, had pledged their support to Charanjit for the Lok Sabha contest of 2019.

But former Batala MLA Ashwani Sekhri has joined the party campaign so has Amit Singh, who lost from Sujanpur after he had openly supported Charanjit’s candidature before Jakhar’s name was announced by the party.

Free power to Punjab farmers to continue, says Rana Gurjit

MISUSE CHARGES Meters to be installed at tubewells that are not being used for farming; says affluent people are misusing the facility

How can Sukhbir call Jakhar outsider, he contested polls from Jalalabad but lives in Bathinda. Jakhar is the only candidate capable of winning Gurdaspur bypolls.
RANA GURJIT SINGH, state power and irrigation minister

KAPURTHALA: The power and irrigation minister Rana Gurjit Singh on Thursday said that the state government will continue to provide free power supply to the farmers here.

He clarified that the government is planning to install electricity meters on the tubewells, installed at farm houses by the people who are not farming using the tubewells.

The minister said many affluent people are misusing the facility meant for needy farmers.

The government will issue bills to the people who have installed pump sets at their farm houses and are not paying the bills, he said.

He also lashed out at the Shiromani Akali Dal chief Sukhbir Singh for calling Sunil Jakhar an outsider and said, “Sukhbir contested assembly polls from Jalalabad constituency but he lives in Bathinda. Jakhar is the only candidate capable of winning in the upcoming Gurdaspur bypolls,” he said.

Personal attack, fight for Gurdaspur seat gets ugly

Ravi Dhaliwal

Tribune News Service

Gurdaspur, September 28

Politicians have started raking up personal issues with state BJP chief Vijay Sampla claiming that Sunil Jakhar is “a true outsider as his wife belongs to Switzerland and people would have to travel to that country to get their work done since he spends maximum time there”.Jakhar was quick to react and claimed that “the outsider debate is irrational as somebody has to come from somewhere”.He said: “If Capt Amarinder Singh, who was tagged as an outsider when he contested the 2014 parliamentary poll from Amritsar, could beat Arun Jaitley by more than 1 lakh votes, what is stopping me from doing so? Indian politics is replete with innumerable such examples. Sampla should check his words carefully before speaking in public.”On the personal front, Sampla went a step ahead by drawing parallels between the in-laws of Swaran Salaria and Jakhar’s. “Salaria’s in-laws are in Tanda Urmur village on the border of Gurdaspur and Pathankot, while Jakhar has his in-laws in Switzerland. It is a known fact that he spends a lot of time there,” he claimed.AAP leader Sukhpal Khaira, too, launched a personal attack at Salaria by issuing a press note in which he made a reference to a Mumbai airhostess who had filed a case against the BJP candidate a few years ago. He also made a reference to Chintpurni Medical College and Hospital, which is owned by Salaria.