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Order on permanent commission to women officers enabling, says Army Chief Naravane

Order on permanent commission to women officers enabling, says Army Chief Naravane

New Delhi, February 20

Army Chief General MM Naravane on Thursday said the force had been championing gender equality and the Supreme Court order granting permanent commission to women officers would give it a lot of clarity in moving forward.

 Pak may need to rethink FATF plan

Pakistan may have to rethink its strategy (on FATF plenary) as even China realised it cannot back its all-weather friend all the time. — General MM Naravane, Army Chief

The Supreme Court on Monday had directed that women officers in the Army be granted permanent commission and command postings. “The Indian Army does not discriminate any soldier based on religion, caste, creed, or even gender. The outlook of the Indian Army has been throughout like this and that is why we started inducting women officers as early as in 1993,” General Naravane told reporters.

The Army has taken the initiative to induct women in rank and file, and the first batch of 100 women soldiers is undergoing training at Corps of Military Police Centre and School, he said.

Letters are being sent to women officers asking whether they would prefer permanent commissioning, the Army Chief said, hailing the verdict as enabling.

“The SC decision is a welcome one as it brings out a sense of clarity and purpose to gainfully employ officers for better efficiency of the organisation,” he said. — PTI


Why jailing Kashmir’s leaders is wrong, undemocratic and unwise

The Modi government’s actions are only emboldening separatists and jihadis
India can offer many explanations for its decisions on Kashmir – a complex history, a desire to integrate the country under one law, terrorism, and misuse of social media. But there is no good reason to detain leaders who have sworn by the Constitution Wassem Andrabi/HTPHOTO

We live in an age of dwindling attention spans and shrinking public memory. So, we may have already forgotten that moment from August in 2018 when Farooq Abdullah, the patriarch of Jammu and Kashmir politics, raised both his arms and invited the audience to chant with him: “Bharat Mata ki Jai”. He was speaking at a memorial to commemorate the late Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) leader and former Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee. For raising these slogans, he was heckled by separatists when he went home to Srinagar. He stood by what he had said.

This octogenarian former chief minister of Jammu and Kashmir has, in the past, also told Pervez Musharraf, the former Pakistani president, where to get off, and passionately opposed the release of Jaish-e-Mohammad chief Masood Azhar, during the hijacking of IC-814.

Whatever his other flaws may be — and like dozens of others of our elected representatives, Farooq Abdullah has many — in a state plagued by secessionist and extremist politics, you cannot accuse him of not having stood with India.

It’s now been six months since he, along with other former chief ministers, Omar Abdullah and Mehbooba Mufti, has been arrested. All three face charges under the draconian Public Safety Act (PSA).

Enough has been said about the absurdity of using the PSA against prominent mainstream politicians. The dossiers against them are unconvincing, and seem hastily put together. The PSA is obviously an ex-post-facto excuse to keep them and their party workers away from political activity. In one dossier against former Peoples Democratic Party minister Naeem Akhar, the charges include criticism of the home minister Amit Shah. Omar Abdullah is considered a threat to public safety because he is able to get the vote out during the peak of militancy. And that Mehbooba Mufti was “Daddy’s girl” was considered a problem till the police chief explained that this was not part of the final official order, and such language should not have been used in police documents.

A serving government employee I met in Srinagar told me that, with the arrests, Delhi had shown the mainstream politicians “their place”. “Now everyone knows how little they matter. It’s clear that the government in Delhi can just lock them up in a cage whenever they wish.”

But that there is little mass outrage on the streets of Srinagar against the political detentions should not be an I-told-you-so moment for the BJP. In fact it should be a matter of great concern. Most ordinary Kashmirs now believe that elected representatives in the Valley have no authority— and worse — no dignity or standing in India’s political hierarchy. Even those who were once lauded by the BJP, like former civil service exam topper Shah Faesal, have been booked under the PSA. Sajad Lone, who called Narendra Modi his brother, and whose party has been an electoral ally of the BJP, was also locked away.

The Modi government may want to believe that it can foster a new Kashmir polity. But at the moment, the vacuum and messaging has only emboldened the separatists and the jihadis. The abject humiliation of those who have chosen to participate in the electoral process has left the separatists and the jihadis and their supporters with the last laugh.

This has little to do with the worthiness or performance of these leaders. And yes, there may be an element of karmic irony in the detentions, as many Kashmiris point out. The PSA, which permits detention for up to two years without trial, has been weaponised against hundreds of Kashmiris on the watch of administrations helmed by some of the detained leaders. In 2010, when the streets erupted in clashes between the paramilitary and protesters and more than a 100 young men were killed, Omar Abdullah’s government, for instance, used the PSA against more than 600 individuals.

But while that may trigger some petty schadenfreude, it does not in any way make these detentions either morally correct or politically useful from India’s point of view. The government can offer many explanations for its decisions in Kashmir— a complex history, a desire to integrate the country under one law, Pakistan’s patronage of terrorism, the misuse of social media by terror groups — but it cannot find a single rational or intelligible reason to explain the detentions of those who have sworn allegiance to the Constitution. And if, indeed, the situation on the ground has improved enough for foreign envoys to visit, how or why should anyone be scared of normal political activity, including peaceful protests against the abrogation of Article 370?

The prolonged detention of Kashmiri politicians is not just anti-democratic, it is against India’s interests. It is, to borrow from the right-wing, anti-national .

Barkha Dutt is an award-winning author and journalist

The views expressed are personal


New army complex to help save resources, says Rajnath Singh

MUCH AWAITED : Lays foundation stone of Thal Sena Bhawan that will house 6,014 offices
Defence minister Rajnath Singh during the foundation ceremony of the Thal Sena Bhawan, in New Delhi, on Friday Vipin Kumar/HT photo

HT Correspondent

letters@hindustantimes.co,

New Delhi : Defence minister Rajnath Singh, who laid the foundation of the Thal Sena Bhawan on Friday, said that the new complex would play a significant role in saving valuable resources and contribute to administrative efficiency, such as bringing army offices, scattered across eight pockets in the national capital, under one roof.

The Thal Sena Bhawan will come up near the army’s sprawling Manekshaw Centre in Delhi Cantonment. Spread over 39 acres, the multi-storeyed complex, which will have a constructed area of 7.5 lakh square metre, will house 6,014 offices and is expected to be built by 2024-25.

The army, which is the biggest among the three services, has been demanding a new complex for several years to accommodate its several wings scattered across the city such as the South Block, Sena Bhawan, RK Puram, the Hutments Area around Central Vista and Shankar Vihar.

The prominent offices that will shift to the new complex include the Engineer-in-Chief’s office, Territorial Army, recruitment branch, some offices of Headquarters Integrated Defence Staff, Army Welfare Housing Organisation, medical branch, National Cadet Corps, Remount and Veterinary Corps and the Ex-servicemen Contributory Health Scheme, two army officials said.

A defence ministry release quoted Singh as saying that the complex will serve as a “source of inspiration that will remind the people of the country about the sacrifices made by our soldiers”.

Addressing the soldiers, he underlined the importance of greater integration among the three services, adding that the appointment of Chief of Defence Staff and creation of Department of Military Affairs were important steps in that direction.

The release cited that the complex has been conceptualised as a multi-storeyed green building, adopting Green Rating for Integrated Habitat Assessment norms. It will be an oval shaped complex, with eight wings. Each of the eight wings — to be separated by green spaces — will have seven floors.

“This new headquarters will be dedicated to the courage and valour of those unsung heroes of the armed forces who have sacrificed their lives for the nation,” Singh tweeted

To be sure, the Sena Bhawan, which is located near South Block, and houses key offices of the army, will continue to function from its current premises.

The new complex will help decongest the crowded Sena Bhawan. The army chief and several other senior officers, who have their offices in the South Block, will continue to work from there until the defence ministry moves out to a new location under the Central Vista redevelopment plan. In that sense, the new complex isn’t really the army’s headquarters.


Tewari seeks CM’s intervention to address army’s concerns over land

HT Correspondent

letterschd@hindustantimes.com

RUPNAGAR : Anandpur Sahib MP Manish Tewari has sought chief minister Capt Amarinder Singh’s intervention to address concerns of the army regarding the land allotted for construction of its proposed selection centre (north) in Rupnagar.

Tewari had earlier written a letter to defence minister Rajnath Singh regarding non-construction of the selection centre on the 203-acre land allotted in April 2012 by the previous SAD-BJP government near the campus of Indian Institute of Technology (IIT), Ropar.

In his reply to Tewari recently, Rajnath stated that the construction could not be carried out as the land allotted for the centre is in a low-lying area, affected by disposal of effluents from a nearby sewage treatment plant (STP).

The minister also stated that the location of the land is “administratively challenging both for candidates and the selection centre due to issues of connectivity and non-availability of a military hospital (in the area)”.

The army’s selection centre (north) is currently being run from an interim location in Kapurthala.

Talking to HT, Tewari said he has written a letter to the CM urging him to address the concerns of the army as the selection centre would be an important “economic multiplier” for the region.

He has also suggested that if the army is no longer interested in setting up the selection centre in Rupnagar, the land should be offered for setting up a second All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) in the state.


Come April, liquor for armed forces in Hry to become dearerEXCISE POLICY

 Comparatively cheap liquor in Chandigarh may divert defence clientele from neighbouring areas

Hitender Rao

hrao@hindustantimes.com

Chandigarh : Armed forces personnel in Haryana will have to shell out more for their drink with the state government deciding to hike the excise duty for liquor sold through the canteen stores department (CSD) from April 1.

As per the 2020-21 excise policy approved by the council of ministers on Thursday, the excise levies for liquor sold to armed forces personnel will increase in the range of 5% to 36% for different kinds of alcoholic drinks.

The excise duty for rum, arguably the most popular drink among defence personnel, has been hiked by around 36%. The levy on rum in 2019-20 excise policy was reduced by around 48%.

The tax in form of assessment fee on imported foreign liquor (IFL, bottled in origin) has been increased by around 15%.

Low alcohol content beverages such as beer and wine will also get costlier for armed forces personnel from the next fiscal as the excise levy on them has been increased by 11-12.5%. Similarly, ready to drink beverages will also get expensive due to a 10% hike in excise duty.The excise duty for Indian-made foreign liquor (IMFL) has been increased by around 5%.

Since the excise duty levied by the Chandigarh administration for CSD liquor is way low, the comparatively cheap liquor may attract a lot of defence clientele from neighbouring Haryana. The CSD liquor in Punjab, however, is costlier than Haryana.

New retail license introduced

The state government has introduced a new retail license for the sale of imported foreign liquor (bottled in origin) called L-2BF. The new license, available for retail outlets of IMFL and bar licensees, will be granted on a fixed fee.

The license, in the form of L-2BF, shall be granted mandatorily to certain earmarked retail outlets of IMFL at a fixed price, which will be determined in accordance with the potential of the vends. The license fee of such retail outlets of IMFL shall be displayed in the excise arrangement separately and will be over and above the tender amount of a vend. Each such L-2BF shall be granted a minimum quota of IFL (bottled in origin) in terms of cases of whisky, beer and wine.


FATF warns Pak to act soon or get blacklisted

ANTI-TERROR WATCHDOG: Islamabad given four months to deliver on 8 counts
FATF warns Pak to act soon or get blacklistedFATF warns Pak to act soon or get blacklistedANTI-TERROR WATCHDOG: Islamabad given four months to deliver on 8 counts

Rezaul H Laskar

letters@hindustantimes.com

New Delhi : The Financial Action Task Force (FATF) on Friday warned Pakistan that it faced the possibility of being added to the watchdog’s “black list” and face greater scrutiny of all transactions in its financial system if it fails to fully implement an action plan to counter terror financing by June.

A statement issued by the multilateral watchdog’s president, Xiangmin Liu of China, at the conclusion of the FATF’s plenary meeting in Paris noted that all deadlines for the 27-point action plan had expired and expressed concerns at Pakistan’s failure to implement the plan according to agreed timelines.

The FATF, which has been repeatedly assessing Pakistan’s efforts to implement the action plan since the country was placed on the watchdog’s “grey list” in June 2018, said Islamabad has “largely addressed” only 14 of the 27 action items, with “varying levels of progress” on the rest of the plan.

“All deadlines in the action plan have expired. While noting recent and notable improvements, the FATF again expresses concerns given Pakistan’s failure to complete its action plan in line with the agreed timelines and in light of the [terror financing] risks emanating from the jurisdiction,” the statement said.

It added: “The FATF strongly urges Pakistan to swiftly complete its full action plan by June 2020.”

“Otherwise, should significant and sustainable progress especially in prosecuting and penalising [terror financing] not be made by the next Plenary, the FATF will take action, which could include the FATF calling on its members and urging all jurisdiction to advise their [financial institutions] to give special attention to business relations and transactions with Pakistan.”

The reference to a “call to action” for countries to apply counter measures to protect the global financial system from money laundering and terror financing risks is the equivalent of being placed in the “black list”, which now has only Iran and North Korea. The FATF listed eight specific areas that Pakistan should focus on while implementing its action plan to address “strategic deficiencies”, including “effective implementation of targeted financial sanctions (supported by a comprehensive legal obligation) against all [UN Security Council Resolution] 1267 and 1373 designated terrorists and those acting for or on their behalf, including preventing the raising and moving of funds, identifying and freezing assets (movable and immovable), and prohibiting access to funds and financial services”.

Among the UN-designated terrorists active on Pakistani soil are Lashkar-e-Taiba founder Hafiz Saeed, who was given a five-and-a-half year prison term in two terror financing cases four days before the FATF meetings began in Paris, Jaish-e-Mohammed chief Masood Azhar, and mob boss and terrorist Dawood Ibrahim.

Also among the eights areas listed by the FATF are “enforcement against TFS violations including administrative and criminal penalties and provincial and federal authorities cooperating on enforcement cases”; ensuring that facilities and services owned by designated person are deprived of resources; application of remedial actions and sanctions in terror financing and money laundering violations; demonstrating that competent authorities are cooperating and taking action against illegal money or value transfer services; and demonstrating the implementation of cross-border currency and BNI controls at all ports of entry.


Wife of Major killed in Pulwama encounter set to join Army

Pulwama encounter, wife of army officer set to join army, Major Dhoundiyal, Indian army major dead, army personnel killed in pulwama encounter, jammu and kashmir, indian express

Nitika Dhoundiyal, wife of Major V S Dhoundiyal, along with other family members in Dehradun on Monday. (Express Photo by Virender Singh Negi)

Wife of Major Vibhuti Shankar Dhoundiyal, who was killed in an encounter in Kashmir’s Pulwama district on Monday, is set to join the Indian Army as an officer.

Nitika Dhoundiyal has already cleared the Service Selection Board (SSB) examination — a test to recruit candidates into the Armed forces as officers. She has also made it through the medical examination and is waiting for the merit waiting list. “I am hopeful that I will get through it too and will join the Army thereafter,” she said in a video shared by a journalist on Twitter. As a tribute to her husband, 28-year-old Nitika will wear the stars from her husband’s uniform on her first day of service.

Wife of Pulwama martyr Major Vibhuti Dhaundiyal, Kaul Dhaundiyal, to join as an officer http://soon.As  her tribute, on her first day, she will wear the stars that were on her husband’s uniform. @indiatvnews @ChinarcorpsIA @adgpi @Tiny_Dhillon

Embedded video

 Major Dhoundiyal (34), along with three other Army personnel, was killed in the encounter in Pulwama district of South Kashmir on Monday morning. His body was brought to his residence in Dehradun’s Nashville Road area on Monday night. A policeman, a civilian and three Jaish-e-Mohammad militants — including its “operations chief” whose role in the attack on the CRPF convoy last week is being investigated — were killed in the operation.

Read | Pulwama encounter: Dehradun remembers Major Dhoundiyal; Simple, no arrogance, very respectful

Standing in front of his coffin on a rainy Monday night, a teary-eyed Nitika had said, “You lied to me that you loved me. In fact, you loved the nation way more. I’m quite jealous and I can’t help it.” She said she was honoured to have him as her husband. “Till my last breath I’ll always love you, Vibhu. It’s hurting that you are leaving but I know you’ll always be around… I request everyone not to sympathise, rather be very strong. Let’s salute this man,” she said as she paid last respects to her husband.

The body was taken to Haridwar where the last rites were performed with full military honours. BJP MLAs Madan Kaushik, Ganesh Joshi, Khajan Dass, Arvind Pandey, Congress MLA Manoj Rawat, and Congress leader and former Uttarakhand chief minister Harish Rawat were among those who paid their last respects to the Major. All party leaders condemned Dhoundiyal’s killing.


From Wife to Soldier: Year After His Martyrdom, Maj Vibhuti Dhoundiyal’s Wife Dons Army Uniform

Nikita Kaul Dhoundiyal, the widow of Major Vibhuti Dhoundial, has cleared her Short Service Commission (SSC) exam and interview, and is now waiting for the merit list.

From Wife to Soldier: Year After His Martyrdom, Maj Vibhuti Dhoundiyal's Wife Dons Army Uniform
File photo of Major Vibhuti Dhoundial with Nikita.

A year ago, she had bent towards his coffin and whispered ‘ I love you’ in his ears. Today, she is ready to don the same uniform that her husband sacrificed his life for.

Nikita Kaul Dhoundiyal, the widow of Major Vibhuti Dhoundial, has cleared her Short Service Commission (SSC) exam and interview, and is now waiting for the merit list.

Sitting at her in-laws’ house in Dehradun, she says, “I filled the SSC form six months after Vibhu’s martyrdom. It was my way to heal. When I wrote the exam and gave the interview, I could feel what he would have felt when he wrote his SSC. I connected with him, his fears and his anxiety. Somehow that gave me strength.”

Major Vibhuti Dhoundial, posted with 55 RR, was martyred on February 17, 2019 in an encounter with terrorists in Pulwama. He was 35. The 20-hour gun battle had claimed the life of three other soldiers.

When his coffin, wrapped in the tricolour, came home to Dehradun, people lined up on the streets to pay homage to the young soldier. But little had anyone known that his widow, who had that day saluted her husband and asked people take inspiration from him, would walk the talk.

“I took time. I first needed to accept what had happened. Vibhu was very progressive. He wanted me to do better than him. So whenever I had any anxiety or doubt about my decision to join the Indian Army, I would close my eyes and think about what Vibhu would do. He was instrumental in my decision to join the army,” Nikita said.

3

The army relaxes the age limit for war widows if they want to join the service, but the selection process remains as tough as it is for others.

“I worked very hard to qualify. Now I want to excel in the one year of training. I want to be an officer who everyone can be proud of, Vibhu can be proud of.”

Nikita currently works with a Noida-based MNC but will be quitting soon to join the Officers Training Academy in Chennai. What she will miss there the most is her husband’s cupboard which still has his uniform, his lip balm, his lighter and even his tooth brush.

“The interview board asked me how long I was married. I said, ‘two years’. They said, ‘But we heard you both were married for nine months…’. I said, ‘Vibhu is not here physically but that doesn’t mean our marriage has ended’.”

Nikita had met Major Vibhuti Dhoundial while she was doing her MBA. This is all she is willing to say about her love story.

 


NCC joins hands with NGO

NCC joins hands with NGO

The NCC has joined hands with a local NGO to assist in the upliftment and welfare of underprivileged persons in the tricity. Under the programme, cadets of No.1 Chandigarh Naval Unit motivated kids living in colonies to be better citizens and follow the code of unity and discipline. They helped the NGO to organise a sports day for under the privileged children. — TNS


Indo-UK joint military exercise underway

Indo-UK joint military exercise underway

Tribune News Service

Jammu, February 19

The Dogra Regiment of the Army is taking part in a joint military exercise with the 1st Rifles of the UK army at the Salisbury Plain Training area in the United Kingdom.

The fifth edition of AJEYA WARRIOR, an Indo-UK joint military exercise at the Salisbury Plain Training area in the UK, started on Thursday.

The opening ceremony started with the national anthem of both countries and was attended by Brigadier VMB Krishnan, Brigadier Gavin Thompson, Brigadier Tom Bewick, Commander, 7 Infantry Brigade and Colonel Amit Saini.

A series of activities pertaining to the counter-terror operations were held after the opening ceremony. Joint practices were carried out on combat conditioning, familiarisation with weapons and equipment of the UK army. The military exercise will end on February 26.