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Thrusting Khalistan on the Sikhs?

WHO DO ALL THOSE CREATING NOISES ABOUT A SEPARATE SIKH COUNTRY REPRESENT? WHO IS BEHIND THE REVIVAL OF NOISES IN THE WAKE OF CANADIAN PM’S RECENT VISIT TO INDIA? AREN’T THESE MARGINALISED SIKH POLITICOS ABROAD?

Anyone who knows something about the Sikhs will tell you that 99% of them are proud of both their community and country. The sacrifices made by the community for the independence and defence of their country have always been the greatest source of their pride, just as the martyrdom of the ninth Master Guru Tegh Bahadur has been. The greatest icons of the community are icons of the whole country — be it Marshall of the Air Force Arjun Singh, Lt Gen Jagjit Singh Arora or Lt Gen Harbaksh Singh, the heroes of the 1965 and 1971 wars with Pakistan.

Then, who do all those creating noises about a separate Sikh country called Khalistan represent? Also, who is behind the revival of these noises in the wake of Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s recent visit to India? Aren’t these marginalised Sikh politicos abroad?

Or is it political voyeurism of Trudeau’s party, itching to milk the Sikh electoral constituency at the expense of the community? Or these are some political parties in India itching as strongly to milk the so-called ‘Hindu backlash’, in a repeat of Indira Gandhi’s 1984 misadventure?

The Sikhs already feel like electoral fodder being fed on from opposite ends by the contrary forces.

HANDIWORK OF VESTED INTERESTS Ironically, the only people who want this Khalistan noise to be given a quick and quiet burial are the Sikh masses who remain convinced that the bogey of Khalistan is being thrust upon them against their wishes by a combination of evil forces, none of whom represents them nor have the interests of the community at heart. Khalistan making headlines is terrible news for the community as it kills all the genuine causes, grievances and demands of the community: a cry for justice on the massacre of 1984 and a fair deal for Punjab, for example.

You cannot convince any Sikh why his reasonable countrymen would oppose the description of the 1984 massacre of Sikhs for being Sikhs as a “genocide”. (Dictionary meaning : massacre of a large number of people belonging to a particular nation, ethnic group, race of religion). And the Sikh grievance is certainly not against the country at all. It is a grievance against the Congress or at the most against the governments’ genuine or perceived denial of justice to the community as per the law of the land. The focus of this belief or perception is the refusal of the system to bring the guilty of 1984 to book as per the Constitution of India.

IT’S A NON-ISSUE FOR COMMUNITY

The visit of the Canadian premier Justin Trudeau and the manner in which the Indian government chose to respond to it have only further strengthened the impression about our failure or refusal – or both – to understand that Khalistan is a non-issue for a vast majority of Sikhs living in India and abroad, including Canada. If Trudeau violated norms of diplomatic decency and hurt our national sensitivities by getting controversial names on board during his trip, the government of India also did not exactly cover itself with glory by doing just what the radical Khalistani fringe wanted it do: putting the Khalistan issue on the front burner. Instead of the diplomatic cold shouldering of Trudeau, it is the issue of Khalistan which needed to be cold-shouldered and denied any media or diplomatic mileage. Trudeau needed to be cornered on the diplomatic high table about the disregard shown to India’s nationalist sentiments. If Trudeau had embarrassed us merely to cater to his domestic constituency, he needed to be confronted, not coldshouldered.

Unwittingly, the handling of the Trudeau trip merely helped to strengthen the radical case that the country’s top executive suffers from bias against the Canadian PM because he has accorded a prominent place to the Sikhs in his government. This amounted to playing straight into the hands of the radicals whom the government needed to outsmart, expose and marginalise.

The government also needed to grasp and highlight that radical elements abroad are working against the interests of millions of peaceloving Sikhs who form the major chunk of the community in India. There is a vast dichotomy between the cynically selfish agenda of the radical fringe abroad and the interests of the poor, simple Sikh farmer battling his dayto-day problems along with his compatriots in India. That is why even during this trip, all the mainstream Sikh voices – from the Akalis led by Sukhbir Singh Badal to the SGPC and the DSGMC and on to the Punjab CM Capt Amarinder Singh — categorically rubbished Khalistan as a “non-issue for the Sikhs.” Why is nobody listening?

RESPECT SIKHS’ DESIRE FOR JUSTICE The Sikh community regards its stakes and destiny as firmly tied with the destiny of their country. They seek justice and fair-play as per the laws of our land, and they strive for their right to live with dignity and fight against discrimination like any other Indian would — through peaceful democratic means. They have a body of legitimate grievances which need to be addressed as the grievances of a fiercely patriotic community of India. On top of this is the need to understand and respect the community’s sense of grievous wrong on the 1984 massacre which the whole community regards as “genocide”.

The radicals have never come anywhere close to winning any election in Punjab. From panchayats to Parliament, it is the moderate mainstream that rules the hearts and minds of the Sikh community. The country needs to avoid the blunders of 1984 and to decipher the correct message in these repeated and resounding electoral rebuffs to the radicals by the Sikhs in Punjab and not force down their throat an agenda which they have repeatedly and forcefully rejected.


Soldier at heart, Amarinder showers largesse on Army Gives it Rs 84 lakh of Rs 1.98 cr from discretionary grant

Vishav Bharti

Tribune News Service

Chandigarh, March 7

Chief Minister Capt Amarinder Singh’s past association with the Army still seems to tug at his heartstrings. He spent a major portion of his discretionary grant on the Army and the BSF. The fact came to the fore in information obtained under the RTI Act.As per the information, the CM spent Rs 1.98 crore in the past one year. Of this amount, Rs 84 lakh went to the welfare of the Army and the BSF.It started in July last year, when the CM gave Rs 23 lakh to the 23rd Battalion of the Sikh Regiment, which was moving from Jammu to Ladakh. In August, the CM gave Rs 11 lakh to the 3rd Battalion of the Sikh Regiment located at Tibri Cantonment, Gurdaspur. Amarinder then spent Rs 40 lakh on the construction of an officers’ mess at BSF station headquarters in Gurdaspur in October. Similarly in December, he gave Rs 10 lakh to the 2nd Battalion of the Sikh Light Infantry, Kapurthala.Besides, he spent Rs 50 lakh for the development of infrastructure of the Bar Association of the Punjab and Haryana High Court. He also gave Rs 10 lakh to Saragarhi Trust for light and sound show.Parvinder Singh Kittna, a Nawanshahr-based RTI activist who obtained the information, said: “The government keeps telling us that the financial health of the state is poor. But the pattern of CM’s spending of discretionary grant reveals that the state is sponsoring the welfare of those who already have plenty of funds at their disposal.”It is not for the first time when the CM gave largesse to the Army. In November last year, Amarinder spent Rs 50 lakh on polo matches organsied by the Western Command of the Army in Patiala. The event was “funded” by the Punjab Livestock Development Board (PLDB). The money was meant for the welfare of small dairy farmers of the state.Significantly, each minister can spend Rs 3 crore annually under the discretionary grant, while the CM can spend up to Rs 10 crore.Spending pattern

  • Most commonly, the ministers spent grant on building the boundary wall of cremation grounds
  • Building entrance gates of villages also figures among the top spending by ministers
  • Grants are also given to religion and caste-based groups, which is a gross violation of the rules

Soldier from Punjab dies in avalanche

Tribune News Service

Srinagar, March 5

A soldier was killed while performing snow-clearance duty with the Border Roads Organisation in north Kashmir’s Kupwara district on Sunday.Sapper Amandeep Singh, 26, a resident of Kalloh village in Mansa, Punjab, laid down his life braving the vagaries of nature in the Keran sector, the Army said.Amandeep got critically injured when the bulldozer that he was driving on the Farkin-Keran road was hit by an avalanche on Sunday. He later succumbed to his injuries.Earlier, three Army personnel were killed when an avalanche struck their post in Machil sector on February 2.


Army camp attacked Missing political accountability

Army camp attacked

THE bravery and sacrifice of the soldiers was once again put to test in the militant attack on an Army camp in Jammu. Five bravehearts lost their lives and those injured in the firefight will forever carry the scars of the battle. By all accounts, the Army again acquitted itself well. But the same can hardly be said for the country’s political leadership. The last three years of Modi governance have been marked by a sickening pattern of loss of soldier and civilian lives in Jammu & Kashmir. Pakistani shelling has disrupted the already subsistence-level lives of citizens along the border: homes abandoned, schools shuttered and normal life gone haywire.By now the most diehard hyper-nationalist should have despaired with the absence of any enlightenment from the country’s security managers about the rationale for persisting with a policy that entails a heavy attrition of lives. The silence appears particularly defeaning because the BJP does not suffer from the handicap of a hostile government in J&K while a hand-picked army chief claims to be giving pain to Pakistani soldiers on the border. Yet the Centre manages to earn a free pass from accountability each time tough questions are asked about the loopholes and quality of its security management by taking recourse to arrogant self-serving posturing on national security. The Modi Government needs to be reminded that aggressive statements are to be matched with political calibre and administrative competence. Three years later this loud-mouthism seems to have only left soldiers in Army camps, out on patrol and in bunkers poorly equipped and vulnerable. The Lt Gen Campose committee has spelled out, in scathing details, the vulnerabilities in the security of military camps after the Uri attack.  It took the Sunjuwan attack to stir the Raksha Mantri to take note of that report. Since May 2014, Defence Ministry has been poorly and indifferently led. Politicisation of national security has been packaged as an answer to country’s defence. This is no service to the nation. 


Army recruitment rally from April 4

Ambala, February 10

The Army Recruiting Office, Ambala Cantonment, is conducting a recruitment rally for the categories of soldier general duty and soldier clerk and storekeeper technical for candidates from Ambala, Kaithal, Karnal, Kurukshetra, Yamunanagar and Panchkula districts and Chandigarh (UT) at Maharishi Markandeshwar University at Mullana in Ambala district from April 4 to 13.Candidates can visit the Army Recruitment Site for more information. Online registration can be done till March and candidates can apply through www.joinindianarmy.nic.in. — TNS


Remove education fee cap for martyrs’ children: Sitharaman to FinMin

Remove education fee cap for martyrs’ children: Sitharaman to FinMin
Defence Minister Nirmala Sirtharaman.

New Delhi, February 10

The Defence Ministry has requested the Finance Ministry to remove the cap of Rs 10,000 per month on educational assistance given to children of martyrs or those disabled in action, official sources said on Saturday.(Follow The Tribune on Facebook; and Twitter @thetribunechd)On July 1 last year, the government had issued an order saying the assistance under the scheme cannot exceed Rs 10,000 per month, triggering widespread discontent among all the three services.The Chiefs of Staff Committee (CoSC), comprising the Army, Navy and the Air Force chiefs, had also written to the defence ministry requesting it to remove the cap.Under the scheme, which was initially rolled out in 1972, tuition fee of children of martyrs or those disabled in action were completely waived in schools, colleges and other professional educational institutions.“The defence minister has requested the finance ministry to remove the cap. We are hoping for a favourable decision,” a defence ministry source said.Approximately 250 students were affected during the current financial year following the government’s decision to cap the assistance, according to officials.Replying to a question in the Rajya Sabha, Minister of State for Defence Subhash Bhamre last month had said the annual saving on account of putting the cap would be Rs 3.20 crore per annum. He had said the highest amount drawn has been reported to be Rs 18.95 lakh per annum per student. — PTI


IAF mulls modifying used planes for aerial refuelling

IAF mulls modifying used planes for aerial refuelling
An IAF IL-78 tanker refuels Mirage-2000 fighters during an exercise.

Vijay Mohan

Tribune News Service

Chandigarh, February 6

With its plan to procure six additional air-to-air refueling aircraft facing headwinds over the past seven years, the IAF is exploring the option of acquiring used transport aircraft and then modifying them for refueling role.Besides seeking the Rough Order of Magnitude (ROM) cost of new custom built refueling aircraft, the IAF has, in a request for information issued this week, also asked prospective contractors the ROM for pre-owned “green” aircraft and modifying them as aerial tankers as well as the estimated discount due to the aircraft being pre-owned.(Follow The Tribune on Facebook; and Twitter @thetribunechd)“Green” aircraft refers to a ready-to-fly aircraft but without any internal cabin fixtures or equipment, which can be later outfitted as per the users’ specific requirements. Many aircraft for VIP use, for instance, are bought from aircraft manufacturers in green configuration and their cabins are styled later by contractors. The IAF has, at present, six Russian IL-78 tankers acquired in 2003 that are four-engine aircraft also capable of being employed as conventional freighters with the fuel tanks. However, maintenance and serviceability issues are affecting this fleet, as was revealed by the Comptroller and Auditor General in its report tabled last year.Specifications listed for the additional tankers indicate that the IAF wants twin engine aircraft having a two-crew cockpit configuration. The IAF’s requirement is a mid or long-range aircraft that can carry sufficient payload to refuel six to eight fighters in a single operation. Among the aircraft that fall in this category are European Airbus 330 and American Boeing 767, both of which have military tanker variants. The procurement process, which would include procurement of ground equipment and support facilities, is likely to commence in the third quarter of 2018. Two procurement bids in the past have gone with the wind.


GOG Training of Dist Gurdaspur commenced on 01 Feb 2018.

GOG Training of Dist Gurdaspur commenced today.DC Gurdaspur alongside his key officers attended. Welldone Brig GS Kahlon and his team.

Brig Prahalad SIngh

Distt GG Pathankot

IMG-20180201-WA0031 IMG-20180201-WA0032 IMG-20180201-WA0033 IMG-20180201-WA0034 IMG-20180201-WA0035


CM seeks Army help for rivers’ revival

CM seeks Army help for rivers’ revival
CM TS Rawat presents a memento to GOC Northern Command Lt Gen Harish Tukhral in Dehradun on Tuesday. Tribune photograph

Tribune News Service

Dehradun, January 30

A civil-military liaison meeting took place today in which Chief Minister TS Rawat urged the Army to extend support to the state government’s drive to revive the Kosi and Rispana rivers.Besides, several issues were discussed, including shifting of Army CSD depot, UPNAL building and SIDCUL land at Udham Singh Nagar.Sub-area Commander, Major General JS Yadav, said if the Army decided to shift the UPNAL office, it would make temporary arrangements for housing at the sub-area. But, for the time being, it was not being shifted. Rawat offered to construct a building for UPNAL if the land was provided by the Army with the promise that the Army would continue to have possession rights on the building and the land.There was also an agreement for the shifting of the CSD depot that is located near Aaraghar Chowk to Transport Nagar which would aid in decongesting traffic on the EC roadOn the issue of 200 acres at Udham Singh Nagar, which the Army wants to acquire it, it came to light that the land was given by the UPSIDC to Nepa Limited. Now this land is with SIDCUL where it proposes to set up an industrial estate. The Chief Minister suggested that a joint survey by the DM of Udham Singh Nagar and MD, SIDCUL, would be undertaken to ascertain the situation. Further, state government officials would also carry out a survey so that a NOC could be given to the Army for transferring 463 acres at Harsil.The meeting was attended by GOC, North, Lt Gen Harish Thukral, GOC, Sub-area, Major General J S Yadav, Chief Secretary Utpal Kumar Singh, DGP AK Raturi, Principal Secretary Radha Raturi, Principal Secretary Anand Vardhan and other officials from the Army and the state government.