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To keep Aurangzeb’s legacy alive, his brothers join Army

To keep Aurangzeb’s legacy alive, his brothers join Army

Rifleman Aurangzeb

Ranjit Thakur

Jammu, July 23

To keep his legacy alive, two younger brothers of slain rifleman Aurangzeb, Mohammed Tariq (22) and Mohammed Shabbir (18), have joined the Territorial Army.

Aurangzeb was abducted from Pulwama by militants and later, his bullet-ridden body was recovered last year. Aurangzeb was proceeding towards his home for Eid when he was abducted in broad daylight from a vehicle.

Mohammad Haneef, 56, himself an ex-Army man, said, “I have proudly dedicated my elder son to Mother India. I am a man of strong will and have prepared two of my younger sons too to serve in the Army. They have recently got selected for training in Ramgarh, Ranchi. I also believe that this is the only way to provide solace to the proud soul of my martyred son.”

He said, “I would ask each Indian to send their children in the Army as our sole motive should be to extradite the intruders from the country. I also want my other two sons to join the Army. They have got admission at Sainik School.”

“My son Aurangzeb is no longer just my son, he is the son of every Indian. I had support from the government and my countrymen. They all helped me through difficult times,” he added. I would also say, “My son has taught me to live one day at a time and make the most of everything you do and believe. We stand proud in the midst of pain.”

 


HAL delivers Chetak helicopter to Indian Navy

HAL delivers Chetak helicopter to Indian Navy

Bengaluru, July 24

State-run Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd. (HAL) delivered a Chetak helicopter to the Indian Navy, with the latest communication and navigation systems, said the defence behemoth on Wednesday.

“The documents of the chopper were handed over to Commodore Vikram Menon by our helicopter division general manager S. Anbuvelan at our facility,” said the city-based aerospace major in a statement here.

The Navy signed a contract with HAL in August 2017 for 8 Chetaks to be delivered by August 2020, with the first two by August 2019.

“The helicopters are fitted with the systems developed indigenously. We will also provide support to the copter fleet,” said HAL Chairman R. Madhavan on the occasion.

The company, however, did not mention the cost of the naval order for supplying the 8 choppers in the statement.

“It is an honour to receive the first helicopter one month ahead of the delivery schedule. We are aware of the vital role Chetak plays in our aviation,” said Menon.

HAL’s helicopter complex chief executive G.V.S. Bhaskar said the company had revived the Chetak production line after upgrading it with the latest technologies.

“We will deliver the seven helicopters by August 2020 as scheduled,” he added.

The company has been rolling out Chetaks over the last 5 decades under licence from France-based Eurocopter or Airbus Helicopters.

The Navy uses the multi-utility Chetaks for communication operations spanning passenger transport), cargo/material transport, casualty evacuation, search and rescue, aerial survey and patrolling, emergency medical services, electronic news gathering, anti-hijacking, off-shore operation and under-slung operation.

HAL has till date produced over 350 Chetaks and delivered 80 to the Navy.

Presently, 51 Chetaks are in operation with Navy. — IANS


Kashmir issue will be resolved soon, says Rajnath Singh

Inaugurates bridge over Ujh river and another at Basantar

PANDORI/KATHUA : Union defence minister Rajnath Singh on Saturday assured the country that the a solution of the vexed Kashmir issue is on the cards and soon Jammu and Kashmir will get rid of militancy.

NITIN KANOTRA /HT■ GOC-in-Chief, Northern Command, Lt Gen Ranbir Singh, chief of army staff General Bipin Rawat, Union defence minister Rajnath Singh and Union minister Jitendra Singh during the inauguration of the Ujh Bridge in Kathua on Saturday.

Indicating a tough posture of the government, Singh said, “We know how to find a solution and I am assuring that Kashmir issue will be resolved soon and no force can stop it from coming true.”

Singh was addressing a public gathering while inaugurating a 1000 metres bridge over Ujh river in Kathua district, built at a cost of ₹50 crore.

Citing the attempts made by him as Union home minister, Singh said he made numerous attempts to hold dialogue with stakeholders to arrive at some sought of solution which may bring the region out of decades old morass.

“I don’t think any other home minister has taken more initiatives to resolve the issue as I did in my five-year tenure. I tried many times and appealed the stakeholders to come to a negotiating table and find a meaningful solution. I took an all-party delegation to Kashmir to hold talks. But everyone saw, the separatists did not open their door,” said Singh.

Taking a dig at separatists, Singh said, “While such elements entice the gullible youth to pelt stones on the streets, their own children study and work abroad. They instigate youth to demand ‘Azadi’. Are they seeking same freedom as Pakistan.”

“Subversive elements had disturbed the atmosphere in Jammu and Kashmir. However, the security forces have valiantly contained the terrorism in the state. Not in Jammu and Kashmir, the terrorism will end everywhere. The way international community has united to eradicate the menace of terrorism, I feel that entire world will get rid of terrorism,” he said.

Meanwhile, defence minister has described the border dwellers as ‘strategic assets’.

“While the security forces discharge their duties along both the International Border(IB) and Line of Control(LoC), people living on borders play a very strategic role. Unfortunately such people have been neglected since many decades and deprived of development despite their huge contribution,” he said.

Later, defence minister also inaugurated 618 metres Basantar bridge in Samba district, built at the cost of ₹41.7 crore.


India loses Afghan proxy war

Pakistan has worsted India in the Afghan proxy war and the defeat becomes a template of regional politics, points out Ambassador M K Bhadrakumar.

The Four-Party Meeting on the Afghan Peace Process, held in Beijing last Thursday and Friday, comprising China, the US, Russia and Pakistan, is a dramatic development auguring a peace settlement in Afghanistan.

In a regional setting, it also signifies that Pakistan has inflicted a heavy defeat on India in the decade-old proxy war in Afghanistan.

The special envoys of the four countries who met in Beijing have issued a joint statement (external link) underscoring their consensus on peacemaking in Afghanistan and signalling their intention to speed up the peace process to a final settlement.

The salients of the joint statement are: First and foremost, the trilateral US-Russia-China format on Afghanistan has been expanded to include Pakistan, given the shared belief of the three big powers that ‘Pakistan can play an important role in facilitating peace in Afghanistan’.

Second, the four countries have endorsed the intra-Afghan meetings in Moscowand Doha in the recent months and called on relevant parties to ‘immediately start intra-Afghan negotiations between the Taliban, Afghan government, and other Afghans’ with a view to ‘produce a peace framework as soon as possible’. 

Third, they have urged that the peace framework should ‘guarantee the orderly and responsible transition of the security situation and detail an agreement on a future inclusive political arrangement acceptable to all Afghans’.

Four, the joint statement encourages the Afghan parties to scale down violence ‘leading to a comprehensive and permanent ceasefire that starts with intra-Afghan negotiations’.

Finally, the four countries have resolved to maintain the momentum of their consultation and ‘will invite other important stakeholders to join on the basis of the trilateral consensus agreed on April 25, 2019 in Moscow, and this broader group will meet when intra-Afghan negotiations start’.

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The Taliban: Barbarians at our gate

The Taliban: Barbarians at our gate

Afghan great game moves centre stage

Afghan great game moves centre stage

All in all, the Four-Party format will henceforth chariot the Afghan peace process — monitoring its progress, mentoring the Afghan protagonists, fine-tuning the intra-Afghan negotiations and so on.

In an upbeat note, the US Special Representative Zalmay Khalilzad tweeted from Beijing on Friday that the four countries agreed that ‘intra-Afghan negotiations between the Taliban, the Afghan government, and other Afghans should start immediately; that these negotiations should produce a peace framework as soon as possible; and detail a future inclusive political arrangement acceptable to all Afghans’.

‘We also agreed that violence needs to slow now and a comprehensive and permanent ceasefire should start with intra-Afghan negotiations. We agreed we will expand and ask more international partners to join with the start of negotiations. Very positive’, Khalilzad added.

In sum, the US, Russia and China who are tiptoeing toward a new Cold War, seem to set aside their differences and disputes and seek and end to the Afghan war.

Curiously enough, the Pentagon’s recent Indo-Pacific Strategy Report (released in June) called China a ‘revisionist power’ and Russia a ‘revitalised malign actor’, but last weekend, all three were tangoing in Beijing like nobody’s business.

Indeed, this is how the ‘great game’ was always played in Central Asia — intense rivalries interspersed with interludes when rival powers retired to the shade, nursed their injuries and brooded over next moves on the shifting landscape.

It is hard to believe that post-war Afghanistan will witness the end of history.

For the present, the game stands suspended.

However, when China’s shadows lengthen over the Hindu Kush and Afghanistan transforms as a hub of the Belt and Road Initiative, which is inexorable, the great game will resume.

As the US vacates its occupation, China becomes the dominant presence in the Hindu Kush.

The US would have no prospects of regaining its lost hegemony in Afghanistan for a foreseeable future — perhaps, never.

The Four-Party format crystallises Pakistan’s crucial role as a factor of Afghan security and stability.

This works in China’s favour and, paradoxically, makes Pakistan an indispensable partner for the US (and Russia) as well.

Washington and its Western allies have no option but to depend on Pakistan to ensure that Afghanistan will not become a ‘lab of terrorists’ (to borrow President Trump’s words.)

Pakistan’s relations with China will acquire a new verve as the BRI spreads its wings in Afghanistan.

The growing Russian interest in the CPEC will take concrete form.

A revival of Pakistan’s moribund strategic ties with the US is already under way.

Without doubt, India is the big loser.

Pakistan has worsted India in the Afghan proxy war and the defeat becomes a template of regional politics.

The Indian analysts put the blame on the US, arguing that Washington ditched India after leading it up the garden path.

Indeed, President Trump once hailed the Modi government as the US’s number one partner in its South Asian strategy.

But does the fault lie with the US?

From the American viewpoint, Afghanistan has become a ‘bleeding wound'(as Gorbachev described the Soviet defeat in Afghanistan), causing a big drain in resources.

In the final analysis, the Indian policymakers failed to read the tea leaves correctly when it became apparent that the so-called Afghan surge under General David H Petraeus ended inconclusively by September 2012, with no fanfare at the Pentagon and no proclamation of success from the Obama White House.

Fundamentally, the Indian policy failure lies in turning Afghanistan into a turf to wage a proxy war against Pakistan.

In the zero-sum mindset, Delhi overlooked that Pakistan has legitimate interests in Afghanistan — no less than what India would have in, say, Nepal — and that by virtue of culture, tribal and ethnic affinity or sheer geography and economic and social compulsions, Afghans can never do without Pakistan.

Delhi regarded the Taliban as a progeny of the Pakistani intelligence and military, but that was never the whole story of the Afghan insurgency and resistance.

Delhi was impervious to other ground realities too — such as that Kabul government was lacking legitimacy, that massive corruption was undermining the State; and, importantly, that this was an unwinnable war and a reconciliation with the Taliban was the only way out.

A long haul lies ahead for India now to regain the lost influence in Kabul.

Meanwhile, India will have to reconcile with the geopolitical reality that Afghanistan comes under the Chinese orbit for the first time in the history of our region.

But the spectre that is haunting Delhi is the strong likelihood of a Taliban takeover in Afghanistan and of a Sharia State emerging in India’s neighbourhood.

How come Indian diplomacy failed to stop this happening?

The short answer is that the obsessive focus on the proxy war meant that India missed the wood for the trees.

The intelligence and security establishment was on the driving seat and there was no sustained effort to network at the diplomatic level with like-minded countries, especially Iran and Russia, or to mobilise international opinion against a Taliban takeover in Afghanistan.

This policy failure will have serious consequences.

Once the US withdrawal is over, India has to deal with a triumphalist Pakistan that gains immense strategic depth vis-a-vis India.

Meanwhile, the big powers are busy securing their specific interests with Pakistani help and cooperation, which leaves India out in the lurch.

The latest al-Qaeda call for ‘jihad’ in India needs to be taken seriously.

But India has cried ‘wolf’ so often that no one may take it seriously when the wolf finally arrives at the doorstep.

A close analysis of the Doha Agreement following the so-called intra-Afghan talks on July 7-8 shows disturbing signs that the Taliban may have ‘marched closer to their stated objectives of enforcing Islamic shari’a rule in Afghanistan and of restructuring the Afghan government institutions, including the military, to their liking’.

This is the expert assessment of the Middle East Media Research Institute headquartered in Washington, after studying the three different versions (external link) of the Doha Agreement and the Taliban’s own version.


Ex-servicemen’s help sought to end drug menace

Tribune News Service

Jalandhar, July 11

The Additional Deputy Commissioner (ADC) Kulwant Singh, today called upon the ex-servicemen to come forward to wipe out the curse of drugs from the Jalandhar district.

Addressing the gathering after flagging off an anti-drug bike rally organised by Ex-Servicemen Welfare Association under Drug Abuse Prevention Officer (DAPO) programme from here today, the ADC, while recalling the stellar role of Armed forces in preserving the unity, integrity and sovereignty of the country, said: The Ex-servicemen have given the prime of their youth to country”

He said it was really proud moment for them to witness Ex-servicemen taking part in the rally which aims to make Jalandhar a drug-free district, adding that it was the need of hour that everyone should join hands to combat the menace.

“The DAPO is one of the ambitious initiatives of the state government which aims at eliminating the drugs from the state with the active support of people.”

(ADC) Kulwant Singh solicited the support of every section of society for this noble cause.

Ex-serviceman dies in mishap

Hoshiarpur, July 10

Avtar Singh (74), an ex-serviceman and a resident of Ghukarwal village, was seriously injured when an SUV hit his scooter near Jiyan village on Chandigarh Road on Tuesday.

He was admitted to a private hospital where he breathed his last. The Chabbewal police handed over the body to the family after autopsy, which was conducted at the Civil Hospital, Hoshiarpur, today. The victim was on his way to Ghukarwal villlage.

The driver of the SUV managed to escape from the spot. The police have registered a case in this regard. — OC


Massive Mudslide Block Chandigarh-Shimla Highway

Massive Mudslide Block Chandigarh-Shimla Highway

SHIMLA: 

Massive mudslides hit the Chandigarh-Shimla national highway between Parwanoo and Solan towns in Himachal Pradesh on Saturday owing to heavy overnight rains, that led to traffic snarls and posed a serious threat to motorists.

The movement of traffic was hampered almost throughout the day due to massive landslides along the highway in Solan district.

Motorists said the maximum landslips were on a 30-km stretch between Parwanoo and Kumarhatti, where over 20 km was either damaged or piled with boulders and muck.

They said the falling debris threatens their safety while travelling through this stretch that has been excavated recently for highway widening.

The executing agency – National Highways Authority of India (NHAI) – for the project which aims to cut the travel time between Chandigarh and Himachal capital Shimla by shortening the distance by 17 kms — cleared the road from of boulders and mud.

The entire stretch from Parwanoo to Solan towns has become a permanent landslide zone particularly Chakki ka Mor. The risk of driving is aggravated after dusk, said motorist Deepak Nayyar.

He said there were frequent incidents of landslips and falling rocks hitting moving vehicles owing to fragile and loose strata with vertical cutting of the hills for the expansion of the highway.

Geologists blame unscientific cutting of precipitous hills, largely of shell, sandstone and clay, for the frequent landslips.

“Most of these mountain slopes are of sedimentary formation and have become destabilised with the reckless cutting by heavy earth-moving machinery. The loose and naked boulders with muck will continue to roll down on the highway for eight to 10 years more,” former state geologist Arun Sharma told IANS.

“On the Parwanoo to Solan stretch, most of the hill cutting was done largely vertically than horizontally. At some points, large-scale vertical cutting was carried out,” added Sharma, a member of the Environment Ministry’s State Expert Appraisal Committee to assess projects.

Union Transport Minister Nitin Gadkari informed the Rajya Sabha on July 8 that the work on four-laning of the stretch between Parwanoo and Solan would be completed within the next six to eight months as the bottlenecks have been removed.

COMMENT

He said the project was being undertaken at a cost of Rs. 750 crore and almost 75 per cent of the work has been completed.


US set to build military coalition to patrol Gulf

RHETORIC HEATS UP US prez vows to ‘substantially increase’ sanctions on Iran

WASHINGTON: The US hopes to enlist allies over the next two weeks in a military coalition to safeguard strategic waters off Iran and Yemen, where it blames Iran and Iran-aligned fighters for attacks, the top US general has said. Under the plan, which has only been finalised in recent days, the US would provide command ships and lead surveillance efforts for the military coalition. Allies would patrol waters near those US command ships and escort commercial vessels with their nation’s flags.

■ The Sterett Destroyer escorts aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln through the Strait of Hormuz.REUTERS

President Donald Trump accused Iran on Wednesday of secretly enriching uranium for a long time and said US sanctions would be increased “substantially” soon, as the UN nuclear watchdog held an emergency meeting on Tehran’s breach of the 2015 nuclear deal. “Remember, that deal was to expire in a short number of years. Sanctions will soon be increased, substantially!,” Trump tweeted.

Washington used the session of the International Atomic Energy Agency’s 35-nation Board of Governors to accuse Iran of extortion after it inched past the deal’s limit on enrichment levels, while still offering to hold talks with Tehran. Iranian representative Kazem Gharib Abadi said it was a “sad irony that this meeting is convened with the request of the United States” as the current impasse was the result of the US’s “outlaw behaviour”, and condemned what he called the “sadistic tendency” of the US to impose sanctions on Iran.

Russia’s Ambassador to the IAEA Mikhail Ulyanov tweeted after the meeting that the US “was practically isolated on this issue”. Iran President Hassan Rouhani rebuffed a warning by European powers to continue compliance with the deal.


Ministry of Defence Revision of OROP Scheme

Posted On: 08 JUL 2019 4:27PM by PIB Delhi
A Committee has been constituted on 14.06.2019 under the Chairmanship of Controller General of Defence Accounts (CGDA) to work out the modalities & methodology of implementation of next revision of pension under One Rank One Pension (OROP)..  The composition of the Committee is as under:-
            (i)  CGDA                                                         :  Chairperson
            (ii)  Joint Secretary (ESW)                               :  Member
            (iii) Addl FA, Defence (Fin.)                             :  Member
            (iv) Representative of three Services             :  Member
            (v)  AddlCGDA                                                 :  Member
            (vi) PCDA (P), Allahabad                                 :  Member
            (vii) Joint CGDA (Pension)                               :  Member & Convener
A Committee has been constituted as above.
This information was given by Raksha Rajya Mantri Shri Shripad Naik in a written reply to Dr. T. Subbarami Reddy and Shrimati Ambika Soniin Rajya Sabha today.
Nampi/HS

HONOURING SPORTS CHAMPIONS

Chief minister Captain Amarinder Singh felicitated around 100 sportspersons, including veterans, with the Maharaja Ranjit Singh Award in Chandigarh on Tuesday. The CM also visited the Postgraduate Institute of Medical Education and Research, Chandigarh, to present the award to hockey legend and three-time Olympic gold medallist Balbir Singh Senior. The award, which was instituted in 1978, carries a cash prize of ₹2 lakh, a trophy of Maharaja Ranjit Singh in armour atop a steed, a blazer and a scroll. Saying that the award has been re-instituted after a decade and would now be an annual event, Amarinder added that he would recommend Balbir’s name for Bharat Ratna, the highest civilian award in the country.

Each of the awardee received a trophy, citation and cash incentive of ~ 2lakh

From page 01 CHANDIGARH : Punjab chief minister Capt Amarinder Singh honoured 101 outstanding sportspersons with the state highest sporting honour — Maharaja Ranjit Singh Awards — at a state-level function in Chandigarh on Tuesday. Sports minister Rana Gurmit Singh Sodhi was also present on the occasion.

■ Former India hockey skipper and Punjab police DSP Rajpal Singh being honoured.

Legendary athletes Milkha Singh, Gurbachan Singh Randhawa, Kamaljeet Kaur Sandhu, 1975 hockey World Cup winning skipper Ajit Pal Singh, former Indian cricket team skipper Bishen Singh Bedi, Olympic medallist hockey players Col Balbir Singh and Brigadier Harcharan Singh were among the sportspersons who were bestowed with the state honour.

Triple Olympic hockey gold medallist Balbir Singh, who is hospitalised, couldn’t attend the ceremony. The Punjab CM will honour him at a special ceremony later.

Tribune News Service
Chandigarh, July 9

The Punjab Government after a gap of almost a decade re-introduced Maharaja Ranjit Singh awards and honoured 20 legends and 81 other players, who brought laurels to the state at a function, today.

The Chief Minister Captain Amarinder Singh honoured a total of 101 players with state’s highest honour ‘Maharaja Ranjit Singh Award’ along with Punjab Sports and Youth Affairs Minister Rana Gurmit Singh Sodhi and Sanjay Kumar, Secretary Sports.

The winners were awarded with a cash award of Rs 2lakh along with a trophy memento. The Punjab Sports and Youth Affairs Minister Rana Gurmit Singh Sodhi also announced that the government has decided to increase the prize money to Rs 5lakh from next year. “The Punjab government has decided to increase the prize money to Rs 5lakh from next year. We have also decided to increase the quota of inviting seats for awarding this prestigious award,” said Sodhi.  “I don’t know the reason behind not giving the awards in past years. But keeping in mind its importance, we will ensure it to be regular feature. I congratulate the Sports Minister and Secretary Sports for their effort in bringing back the Punjab’s legacy,” said Captain Amarinder Singh. The amended sports policy of the state was also launched. Former players

Balbir Singh Sr, Milkha Singh, Gurbachan Singh Randhawa, Ajit Pal Singh, Bishan Singh Bedi, Kamaljeet Kaur Sandhu, Brigadier Harcharan Singh, Colonel Balbir Singh, Baldev Singh, Harmik Singh, Hardeep Singh, Jagjeet Singh, Gulshan Rai, Jaipal Singh, Gurpreet Singh, Balwinder Singh, Paramjit Singh and Harbhajan SinghAwardees for 2011 

Rajpal Singh, Rajinder Singh Rahelu, Heena Sidhu, Mandeep Sidhu, Mandeep Kaur, Gagandeep Kaur, Dilawar Singh, Kuljit Singh, Jagdeep Singh, Komalpreet Shukla, Ravipal, Ranjit Kaur, Mankiran Kaur, Gurchand Singh, Hardeep Singh and Manjit Singh

2012

Navpreet Kaur, Sunita Rani, Gurinder Singh, Amrit Singh, Shammipreet Kaur, Kiranjit Kaur, Rajwant Kaur, Sarwanjit Singh, Sahil Pathania, Jashandeep Singh, Lakhbir Kaur, Navjot Kaur, Ranjit Singh and Mahabir Singh

2013

Mandeep Kaur, Amandeep Kaur, Sapna Dutta, Samit Singh and Triptpal Singh

2014

Davinder Singh, Gurbaaz Singh, Jasmine, Mandeep Singh and Baljit Singh

2015

Arpinder Singh, Trisha Deb, Shahbaz Singh Bhangoo, Dharamvir Singh, Aman Kumar, Rubi Tomar, Shiv Kumar, Vikas Thakur, Davinder Singh and Amandeep Sharma

2016

Swaran Singh Virk, Khushbir Kaur, Kanwalpreet Singh, Amjot Singh, Rekha Rani, Neelam Rani, Prabhjot Kaur Bajwa, Maninder Kaur, Gurwinder Singh, Rajwinder Kaur, Gurinder Singh, Malaika Goyal, Gurpreet Singh, Jasvir Kaur, Parul Gupta

2017

Raj Rani, Amandeep Kaur (handball) , Amandeep Kaur (hockey), Varinder Kumar, Ajitesh Kaushal, Davinder Singh and Sanjeev Kumar

Awardees for 2018

Manpreet Singh, Navjit Kaur Dhillon, Ramandeep Kaur, Gurjit Kaur, Randeep Kaur, Veerpal Kaur, Navneet Kaur, Sahil Chopra, Harshdeep Kaur and Veena Arora


MOD Decides to Give Special Family Pension/Liberalised Family Pension to NOKs of Pensioner on Death Attributable to Military Service

Prior to 17.01.2013, the Next of Kins (NOKs) of Armed Force Pensioner who got re-employed in civil department after getting retired from military service were authorised to draw Ordinary Family Pension (OFP) either from military side or from civil side whichever was beneficial to them in terms of GoI, MoD letter No. 10(6)/92/D(Pens/Sers) dated 28.09.1992.

Vide GoI, MoD letter dated 17.01.2013 & 21.03.2013, it was decided that the families of Armed Forces pensioners who got re-employed in civil departments/military after getting retired from military service and were in receipt of military pension till death, shall be allowed to draw family pension from military side in addition to the family pension, if any, authorised from the re-employed civil department.

The Government has been receiving grievances from various quarters for grant of dual family pension including Special Family Pension/Liberalised Family Pension where death of the re-employed government servant is attributable to government service.

The matter has been examined in the Ministry and now, it has been decided by the Ministry of Defence that Special Family Pension (SFP)/Liberalised Family Pension (LFP), would be admissible on death of a pensioner who was re-employed in military service and if his death is attributable to military service, in addition to Ordinary Family Pension in respect of the previous military/civil service subject to fulfilment of other condition as mentioned in the said Government letter.

Kind regards
G.S.Sidhu
Chairman
AFVAI