Sanjha Morcha

What’s New

Click the heading to open detailed news

Current Events :

web counter

Print Media Reproduced Defence Related News

Army orders probe into lingering rift between two generals in South Western Command At loggerheads over the role, charter and duties of various appointments as well as on running of the command

Army orders probe into lingering rift between two generals in South Western Command

New Delhi, February 3

In a rare move, the Army has ordered a Court of Inquiry (CoI) to look into a lingering rift between two generals of the Jaipur-headquartered South Western Command over a range of issues relating to the overall functioning of the crucial formation, authoritative sources said.

Chief of the command Lt Gen Alok Kler and his deputy Lt Gen KK Repswal are at loggerheads for the past several months over the role, charter and duties of various appointments as well as on running of the command that takes care of security along the borders in Rajasthan and Punjab.

It is learnt that Lt Gen Kler had made a representation to the Chief of Army Staff on the conduct of Lt Gen Repswal. A similar complaint was made by Lt Gen Repswal against his senior.

The Army headquarters tasked Lt Gen IS Ghuman, the Central Army Commander with conducting the probe, the sources said.

They said Lt Gen Ghuman was examining the allegations and counter allegations by both the generals and will submit a detailed report based on the investigation.

“Any further step will be based on the report,” said a source.

Around September last, Chief of Army Staff Gen MM Naravane had asked then Vice Chief of Army Staff Lt Gen SK Saini to look into the issue. Lt Gen Saini retired on January 31.

Both Lt Gen Kler and Lt Gen Repswal belong to illustrious military families.

Lt Gen Kler was commissioned into the armoured corps in June 1982. He commanded an armoured regiment and armoured Brigade in Western Sector.

Lt Gen Kler is due for retirement in March while Lt Gen Repswal is being transferred to Kolkata-headquartered Eastern Command. PTI


AAP actions not pro-farmer: CM

AAP actions not pro-farmer: CM

Chief Minister Capt Amarinder Singh. File photo

Tribune News Service

Chandigarh, February 3

A day after the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) walked out of the all-party meeting, Chief Minister Capt Amarinder Singh on Wednesday said the people of Punjab should not expect anything better from a party whose chief was, on record, touting the farm laws as the most revolutionary step in the agriculture sector in 70 years.

He said the act of walkout had not only shown the party in its true colours, but also bared their lie on Arvind Kejriwal’s video, which showed the Delhi CM narrating the benefits of the farm laws. Trashing AAP’s claim of the video being doctored, he said, “How can one believe them after their continued theatrics over the farm laws and the farmers’ agitation, including their walk-out from yesterday’s meeting?

Citing the alleged presence of AAP Punjab member Amrik Micky at the Red Fort during the violence of January 26, the Chief Minister said there was no doubt now that the party was hand in glove with the BJP in the conspiracy to destabilise and sabotage the farmers’ peaceful agitation.

“What have they done to help or support the farmers all these months?” Capt Amarinder asked, adding that the string of AAP actions in recent weeks clearly proved that their sympathies were not with the farmers but with the BJP and their crony capitalists. “Why else did the Kejriwal government in Delhi notify the implementation of one of the black farm laws in November last? Why else have they allowed the national capital’s roads to be dug up and the farmers’ protest sites barricaded like fortresses, instead of exercising their powers since the control of the city roads lies with the Delhi Government and not with the Centre?” asked the Chief Minister.

“It is ridiculous that a party which cannot stop its own property from being taken over in this shocking manner, in a state where it is in power, should walk out from a pro-farmer meeting in Punjab demanding that our police should go to their state, against all rules and laws,” Capt Amarinder said.

The Chief Minister also took a dig at Kejriwal for taking more than a week to release the list of farmers thrown into the Tihar jail.


Video doctored, delete it: Kejriwal

Reacting to a video being shared by CM Capt Amarinder Singh’s media adviser stating that the Delhi CM supports the central farm laws, AAP national convener and Delhi CM Arvind Kejriwal said the party would take legal action in this regard. “This is a doctored video… If Captain Amarinder does not withdraw this video immediately and apologise, I will take legal action against him,” he said.


Armed forces institute to come up in Hoshiarpur

Armed forces institute to come up in Hoshiarpur

Industries Minister Sunder Sham Arora and DC Apneet Riyait inspect the site map of the institute in Hoshiarpur. Tribune Photo

Tribune News Service

Chandigarh, February 3

Chief Minister Capt Amarinder Singh today virtually laid the foundation stone of Sardar Bahadur Amin Chand Soni Armed Forces Preparatory Institute, to be established at Hoshiarpur.

The project, spread over 12.75 acres in Bajwara village, will be executed at Rs 27 crore and will be completed by the year-end.

The institute would impart training to 270 candidates per year, as per an official statement. The land has been gifted by Sardar Bahadur Amin Chand Soni Education Trust and Society, headed by Member of Parliament Ambika Soni.

The Chief Minister said the institute would help the youth, who wish to join the armed forces. At a time, when women pilot officers were flying the Rafale and helicopters, and actively involved in every field of the armed forces, soon girls in India would be a part of the fighting forces like their counterparts in other countries, he said.

Capt Amarinder Singh lauded the role of Maharaja Ranjit Singh Armed Forces Preparatory Institute at Mohali in training the youth to secure a permanent commission in the armed forces through the National Defence Academy or equivalent centres.

Referred to Mai Bhago Armed Forces Preparatory Institute for Girls at Mohali, which imparts training to girls after Class XII for a career as commissioned officers, he said the institute had so far trained 75 cadets, of whom seven had been selected in the defence services.


8 courses a year to train 270 youths

  • The institute will train the aspirants for induction into Armed Forces, keeping the entry at graduate level for CDSE/AFCAT
  • It will run three courses in a year of three months’ duration with intake capacity of 40 candidates, thus training 120 candidates in a year under its Entrance Exam Training Wing
  • Under another Service Selection Board Training Wing, the institute will train those who have received call letters for appearing in Service Selection Board
  • The institute will run five courses in a year, each of eight weeks’ duration with course strength of 30 candidates, to train 150 candidates in a year

Opposition MPs not allowed to reach Ghazipur protest site

Opposition MPs not allowed to reach Ghazipur protest site: Harsimrat

New Delhi, February 4

Fifteen MPs from 10 opposition parties, including the SAD, DMK, NCP and the Trinamool Congress, were stopped by police from reaching Ghazipur border on Thursday to meet farmers protesting against new farm laws, the leaders were not allowed to cross the barricades and reach the protest site.

Besides Badal, Supriya Sule from NCP, Kanimozhi and Tiruchi Siva from the DMK, and Saugata Roy from the TMC were part of the delegation. Members of the National Conference, RSP and the IUML were also part of it.

During a discussion in Parliament on Wednesday, several opposition parties asked the government to withdraw the three farm laws without making it a prestige issue and not to treat the agitating farmers as “enemies”.

Stringent security continued at Ghazipur on the Delhi-Uttar Pradesh border, one of the key protest sites where thousands of farmers are camping with a demand that the Centre repeal the new agri-marketing laws enacted last September.

The protesting farmers have expressed the apprehension that these laws would pave the way for the dismantling of the minimum support price (MSP) system, leaving them at the “mercy” of big corporates.

However, the government has maintained that the new laws will bring better opportunities to farmers and introduce new technologies in agriculture. PTI


Bajwa offer on J-K issue: India, Pakistan should resolve it in ‘dignified, peaceful manner’ ‘Won’t let anyone misinterpret desire for peace as sign of weakness’

Bajwa offer on J-K issue: India, Pakistan should resolve it in ‘dignified, peaceful manner'

Qamar Javed Bajwa. AP/PTI file photo

Tribune News Service
New Delhi, February 3

Pakistan Army Chief Gen. Qamar Javed Bajwa has called on both countries to resolve the long-standing issue of J & K in “a dignified and peaceful manner as per the people’s aspirations”.

“We stand firmly committed to the ideal of mutual respect and peaceful co-existence. It is time to extend a hand of peace in all directions. However, we will not allow anybody or any entity to misinterpret our desire for peace as a sign of weakness,’’ he said during a graduation ceremony at PAF Academy Asghar Khan in Risalpur, Pakistan.

Gen. Bajwa also commended fighter pilots who participated in an aerial skirmish with the Indian Air Force in early 2019.

The outstanding courage and professional excellence displayed by brave air warriors of Pakistan Air Force during Operation Swift Retort is a manifestation of our resolve and capability. The immaculate coordination and harmony displayed by all the three services in operations against the enemies of Pakistan has brought great improvement in the internal security environment,” he said, according to Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR).

 


Rakesh Tikait emerges ‘hero’ of farmers’ agitation initiated by Punjab unions Focus shifts from Singhu, Tikri borders to Ghazipur

Rakesh Tikait emerges ‘hero’ of farmers’ agitation initiated by Punjab unions

BKU (Tikait) leader Rakesh Tikait. PTI photo

Vibha Sharma
Tribune News Service
New Delhi, February 3 

Amid international support for the farmers’ movement, an interesting change is being reported in the agitation at Delhi borders against the three contentious farm laws that has completed 70 days in the running.

Attention is gradually shifting from Singhu and Tikri, where Punjab unions are camping, to Ghazipur where BKU (Tikait) leader Rakesh Tikait is holding the fort.

Also read: After Rihanna creates flutter over farmers tweet, Kangana calls her ‘fool’, farmers ‘terrorists’

Interestingly, while the status quo of Punjab union leaders is largely unchanged, Rakesh Tikait is fast emerging as the ‘star’ of the movement.

“Currently most of the focus is on him, which is an interesting development given that in the initial days of the movement, he (Rakesh Tikait) was nowhere in the picture,” says a BKU leader who did not wish to be named.

Also read: India blames fringe groups for global social media storm against farm laws

He also pointed towards how “Punjab unions had sidelined the BKU (Tikait) faction in the state in the initial days of the agitation”.

Also read: Withdraw farm laws, don’t make it prestige issue: Azad tells govt in Rajya Sabha

A section is also pointing towards the “shift in focus” from wheat and rice given that Western UP farmers mostly grow sugarcane.

“What sugarcane farmers do (with sugar mills) is also a form of contract farming,” said a farmer.

Also read: After Rihanna, Greta Thunberg and others make farmers’ protest global

This is a huge development in context of Uttar Pradesh, India’s largest state and integral to election plans of any political party. The state, which goes to Assembly polls next year, sends as many as 80 Lok Sabha MPs to the Centre.

Also read: Delhi Police announce cash reward for info on Deep Sidhu, 3 more accused in R-Day violence

Shashi Tharoor, Rajdeep Sardesai move SC against FIRs over R-Day violence

 

Group of academics seeks repeal of farm laws

140 lawyers send petition to CJI, request him to take note of Internet ban at farmer protest sites

SC refuses to entertain PILs seeking probe by judicial inquiry panel into Republic Day violence


Farmer leaders at Jind khap mahapanchayat adopt 5 resolutions Farmer leaders Rakesh Tikait, Gurnam Singh Charuni and Balbir Singh Rajewal attend the mahapanchayat

Farmer leaders at Jind khap mahapanchayat adopt 5 resolutions

Farmer leaders at the khap mahapanchayat in Jind on Wednesday.

Deepender Deswal

Tribune News Service

Jind, February 3

The khap mahapanchayat here on Wednesday adopted five resolutions.

The mahapanchayat in the presence of farmer leaders Rakesh Tikait, Gurnam Singh Charuni and Balbir Singh Rajewal demanded repeal of the three laws, making a law to ensure minimum support price, waiving of the loan of the farmers, implementation of the Swaminathan Commission recommendations and to withdrawal the criminal cases registered against the farmers in Delhi on January 26.

A large number of farmers gathered at the mahapanchayat hosted by the Sarv Jatiya Kandela khap near Jind.

Kandela village, located about 10 km from Jind, is the headquarters of the Kandela khap which has influence in about 20 adjoining villages. People from these villages have been providing logistic support and the manpower to the ongoing farmers’ stir near Delhi borders for over two months.

Following the emotional outburst by Tikait on Thursday, farmers from the region, including Kandela village, had rushed to the Ghazipur border after which the agitation got strong and the government authorities who are mulling to remove the farmers from the dharna site, had to retreat.

The stage on which Bharatiya Kisan Union (Arajnaitik) leader Rakesh Tikait & other farmer leaders were standing, collapses in Jind, Haryana. A ‘Mahapanchayat’ is underway in Jind. open link below
Moving-animated-down-arrow

 

 

 

https://twitter.com/i/status/1356893183955791872

Tekram Kandela, pradhan of the Kandela khap, said the farmers from the village immediately started a tractor march to the Delhi border when the video of Tikait breaking into tears went viral on social media on January 28 as the government was planning to launch a crackdown on Tikait and other farmers sitting on dharna at Ghazipur.

Overwhelmed by the support from Haryana, Tikait called Tekram Kandela and decided to hold a meeting at Kandela village. The khap pradhan said they had invited all the khap panchayats of Haryana for the meeting and expected a huge turnout.

He said they had demarcated seven acres of land near the chabutara of Kandela khap in the village and made preparations for providing food and water to the participants.

Kandela village was also the centre of farmers’ agitation in 2002 against the then INLD government on the issue of power bills.

The stage on which the farmer leaders were sitting also collapsed, according to a report by news agency ANI.