18 December 2014

When will India start to honour those who fought in its name?

16 December 2014

Legend: The general who led the country in 1971, Field Marshal Sam Manekshaw, was an authentic Indian legend

December 16, 1971, is an unforgettable date for anyone who lived through the Bangladesh War.

Vijay Diwas, as the day is known, commemorates not just an absolute military triumph, unparalleled in modern Indian history, but also the triumph and heroism of the professional Indian soldier. 

Three-thousand, eight-hundred and forty-three Indian soldiers died in 1971. About three times that number, 9,851, were injured. 

The war also saw 1,313 Indian soldiers receiving gallantry awards, many posthumously. Four were awarded India’s highest battle honour, the Param Vir Chakra. 

These four men represented the best of India, and yet they came from diverse backgrounds. 

Lance Naik Albert Ekka was born in a small village near Ranchi. 

Second Lieutenant Arun Khetarpal from Pune, was just 21 when he died in his tank, having single-handedly crippled the Pakistani armoured advance at the Battle of Basantar. 

Leadership 

Flying Officer Nirmaljit Singh Sekhon, literally the Flying Sikh, defended the skies above Srinagar, taking on and outgunning F-86 Sabres in his slower and smaller Gnat. 

Finally, there was Major Hoshiar Singh, who braved heavy shelling and went trench to trench, urging his men to fight on and capture an important Pakistani position in the Shakargarh Sector.

What motivated these men and thousand others? Under the inspiring leadership of men like Field Marshal Sam Manekshaw, these men weren’t just “doing a job”; they were going well beyond the call of duty, showing extraordinary calm and determination and sheer, audacious bravery to fulfil the national objective despite overwhelming odds. 

It is important to recall and remember these achievements, and distinguish this from the self-congratulation of a political and sarkari bandobast on every Vijay Diwas. 

Politicians and bureaucrats in the Ministry of Defence have essentially spent the past four decades riding on the valour, the grit and the hard-won successes of those heroes of 1971. 

And how have they appreciated these men? The general who led us in 1971, Field Marshal Sam Manekshaw, was an authentic Indian legend. 

When he died in 2008, the Government of that time did dishonour. Let alone their presence, no wreaths were placed on behalf of the President and the Prime Minister. The Defence Minister was too busy with political meetings in Delhi. Instead, he sent his Minister of State – the most senior government representative at Sam Manekshaw’s funeral. 

Three-thousand, eight-hundred and forty-three Indian soldiers died in the Bangladesh War of 1971. About three times that number, 9,851, were injured

Was this an unconscionable, one-off oversight? I would argue it betrayed a certain attitude and mind-set that has long since treated soldiers as cannon fodder to be used and discarded. 

Let me tell you another story, also from 1971, though not from the war. 

It begins with an earlier war, that of 1965, and with the martyrdom of Babaji Jadhav, a jawan of the Maratha Light Infantry, who was killed in Jammu & Kashmir. 

Dispute 

He left behind a pregnant wife, so traumatised that a few months later she delivered a stillborn child. 

Life was hard for this martyr’s widow. She began with menial jobs, including one as a tailor’s assistant. Later, she became a teacher in a village primary school. 

Just before he died, Babaji had applied for an agricultural plot under a scheme that gave soldiers priority while allotting government land to landless peasants. 

Indira Jadhav, Babaji’s widow, pursued the case. It took her six years, until 1971, to get an assurance that the Government’s promise to her husband would be honoured. 

In July 2014 Indira Jadhav had approached the Bombay High Court. Not only had she not got an inch of the promised land, she was being asked to pay market rates – 2014 rates – by the district administration of Ratnagiri. 

At the end of her wits, the lady went to court. She must have asked herself a hundred times: is this the country and people my husband fought and died for? 

In 2010, the case of Pushpa Vanthi came to light. Living in Meerut, this 90-year-old widow of a retired Major was being paid a monthly pension of Rs 80. She was entitled to Rs 27,000 and had been battling the Ministry of Defence for 13 years, since her husband’s death. 

Soldiers hold a wreath, to be placed at the Tiger Hill war memorial to pay tribute to the army soldiers who sacrificed their life in the 1971 war against Pakistan 

She believed her husband died of war wounds sustained years earlier. The Ministry claimed he died of an illness not related to the wounds. 

As the dispute festered, the due pension was held up – and a soldier’s grieving widow was left to survive on Rs 20 a week. 

Appalled and ashamed, my foundation – The Flags of Honour Foundation – stepped in and offered to pay a monthly stipend to Pushpa Vanthi. It was the least we could do. 

Grievances 

Why should our old soldiers and their families, the wives and dependents of our martyrs, continue to be the step-children of Vijay Diwas? 

If we are to address this, the new Defence Minister has to take up as his mandate a set of long-pending demands and grievances of the Armed Forces. 

The setting up of a Veterans’ Commission, as a statutory institution to which old soldiers and their families – such as Indira Jadhav and Pushpa Vanthi – can go for help, is overdue. So is a uniform policy on gallantry award winners. 

Currently, this varies from state to state. Clear, rigorous and expeditious implementation of the One Rank, One Pension policy, and a mechanism to look into the problems of disabled soldiers, for a lifetime, are other essentials. 

We owe this to the men and women who defend us. It is the unfinished business of Vijay Diwas year after year for the past 43 years. 

The writer is a Rajya Sabha MP 

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