SOLDIERS CHATBOX ..... BIGGER AND BETTER

Sunday, October 4, 2009

IITs set up two panels, profs meet PM’s secy


Oct. 3: The directors of the IITs, after a meeting with faculty representatives, set up two committees Saturday to look into pay-related and other grievances. IIT Kan-pur director Sanjay Dhande said one will examine ways to upgrade professors to the next grade, while the other will deal with implementing the performance-related incentive scheme.
IIT faculty representatives, meanwhile, took their grievances to the PMO Saturday, and met Mr T.K.A. Nair, principal secretary to the PM, briefing him about their discussions with HRD minister Kapil Sibal and the IIT directors.


Ex-serviceman on a mission

Tribune News Service
Udhampur, October 3
Lt-Gen BS Jaswal, GOC-in-C Northern Command, today felicitated ex-serviceman of the J&K Rifles Prabhjit Singh, who is on a mission to traverse the entire country on a bicycle. Prabhjit Singh was felicitated today in a function at the Northern Command headquarters, Udhampur.
He stopped at the Northern Command headquarters and met Lt-Gen BS Jaswal, GOC-in-C Northern Command. The Army Commander met Prabhjit Singh and complimented him for his extraordinary effort and courage.
Northern Command spokesperson Col DK Kachari said: “Despite being physically challenged Prabhjit chose to undertake this mission which began at Ambala on January 19. Over the past nine months he has travelled alone on his cycle and covered a distance of over 16,210 km. As he left for Srinagar, Prabhjit left a message for all Nothing is Impossible.”

Army recruitment rally begins

Tribune News Service
Rajouri, October 3
After a gap of “almost 15 years”, the Army today conducted a recruitment rally in border town of Poonch. Over 10,000 youth participated in the rally, which started today and will end on October 7. A large number of youth lined up near the Air Field Army Camp, Poonch, the venue of the rally.
“It was after a gap of almost 15 years that the Army authorities conducted a recruitment rally at Poonch. Earlier, the recruitment rallies were conducted by the Army authorities at Jammu, Samba and other places. It is a welcome gesture by the Army authorities,” the father of a youth, who took part in today’s rally, said.
Commander, Poonch Brigade, Brigadier Satish Dua, Poonch MLA Ajaz Jan and Poonch Deputy Commissioner Kuldeep Khajuria attended the inaugural ceremony of the recruitment rally.
Appreciating the Army authorities for conducting a recruitment rally in Poonch, the Poonch MLA said the rally would help in solving employment problem in the area.

Army to procure 300 light tanks



Vijay Mohan
Tribune News Service
Chandigarh, October 3
Even as the Indian Army continues to rectify problems that cropped up with its recently inducted T-90 main battle tanks, it has drawn up plans to procure about 300 light tanks.

A request for information issued to prospective vendors has pegged the requirement at about 200 wheeled light tanks (armoured cars) and about 100 tracked light tanks.
The Army wants tanks for effective employability in the high-altitude areas and mountainous terrain as well as in the deserts and urban and semi-urban terrains in the western sector. The numbers and type of tanks and the projected areas of deployment is indicative of the Army’s threat perceptions and operational requirements in various theaters and its doctrinal approach.
Defence sources say the numbers could rise. The army, at present, has 63 armoured regiments out of which about half a dozen have been re-equipped with the T-90
Russian T-90s, procured a few years ago, faced problems while operating at high temperatures in the desert, affecting the tanks’ electronics, fire control system and thermal imagers.
According to sources, trials are on in desert to evaluate ratifications and modifications to overcome the problems. About a dozen Russian experts are assisting the Army in the Rajasthan ranges. The Army initially bought 310 T-90s and placed an order for another 330 in 2007 besides license producing another 1,000 by 2020.
Military experts say that light tanks would primarily be used for reconnaissance, where speed and stealth are preferred over firepower. Wheeled tanks have a much lower audio signature and are more manoeuverable than tracked tanks.
Maj Gen Raj Mehta, a cavalry officer, said light tanks are more effective in areas like paddy field, water-logged terrain, sand and marshy ground, where the ground pressure is very low.
Then there is the issue of logistics and cross-country transportation. A light tank weighs up to 14 tonnes while the T-90 or the Arjun weigh 45 and 58 tonnes, respectively. This makes it easier to transport them to the high-altitude areas in Ladakh or North-East by road or air.

Clarify stand on China ‘threat’: Rajnath Singh to UPA



Itanagar, October 3
BJP today asked the Congress-led UPA government for a “clarification” to the people on actual position over the “growing threat from China” over the so-called border disputes in Arunachal Pradesh and other parts of the country.

Making it an election issue against rival Congress in Arunachal Pradesh that goes to Assembly election on October 13, BJP president Rajnath Singh told an election rally here, “Weak-kneed policy of the UPA government has emboldened China to raise question mark on security of some frontier areas in India. People are frustrated over such slackness on part of the UPA government which must take all precaution as China is trying to encircle India from three sides to establish itself a super power.” “There were 140 Chinese incursions in 2008 and the figure has risen to 270 attempts in the current year so far. Still, the UPA government is asking the media not to hype up the incursion issue instead of countering China threat in equal measure. What message is it trying to send? Why vote for a party that is not serious about protecting your self-pride and security over looming threat from China?” Singh said appealing to voters to make BJP a balancing factor in formation of the next government in the hill state.
“China had to accept Sikkim as an integral part of India when the BJP-led NDA government was in power in New Delhi. It was possible because of our bold stand on maintaining territorial integrity of the country,” the BJP leader said.
He accused the rival Congress of resorting to “money power” to win elections in the hill state “where people have remained poor while ruling Congress leaders have amassed huge personal resources.”
“Arunachal Pradesh attained statehood in 1972. During the last 37 years, the Congress ruled the state for about 35 years and common people are still languishing in poverty an under development while the leaders of your choice have grown richer and richer,” Singh said.
He fired a broadside at the UPA government for failing to check shooting prices of essentials despite its promise to check it within 100 days. “The consumer price index has jumped to 15 % from 10.2 % and the economy seems to have spun out of control of the UPA government.”


Indian Navy to conduct recruitment drive for engg students

LUCKNOW: Indian Navy would conduct its recruitment drive under -- University Entry Scheme (UES-2010) at Integral University, Lucknow, for engineering students who will qualify in 2010. Students from AICTE approved institutions from all over the state would participate in drive. A team headed by Cdr Ajeet Sethi, from Naval Head Quarters, New Delhi would conduct the recruitment process at Integral University from October 5 to 7, 2009. 

All male BTech (Final Year) students of non IT stream, having 60 per cent marks in BTech till VI Semester and have no standing backlog may participate in the drive. Female students of civil and mechanical engineering are also eligible to participate. 

Students of electronics, electrical, mechanical, civil, architecture, control & instrument etc may also get in touch with training and placement officer (TPO), Integral University, through TPOs of their respective institutes and take part in "walk-in-interviews" along with duly completed application form, which can be downloaded from Navy website www.nausena-bharti.nic.in. 

"Students should also bring photocopies and original documents along with the application form. The application must be endorsed by the principal/director of the institution. The eligibility criteria is also given in the website. Navy officers would also conduct similar drives at HBTI Kanpur and MNNIT Allahabad later," said Afaq Mahmood, TPO, Integral University.

PM plays development card in Arunachal Pradesh

PASIGHAT (Arunachal Pradesh): Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on Saturday spared no efforts to woo voters for the October 13 polls in Arunachal Pradesh. But significantly, he chose to keep mum on China's frequent claims over the north-eastern frontier state as its own. 

"Congress has an emotional attachment to Arunachal and its beautiful people. The party is always concerned for its weelbeing and development," Singh said, while addressing an election rally in Pasighat, the district headquarters of East Siang district and the oldest town of the landlocked state established in 1911 by the British. 

Braving scorching heat for hours together to get a glimpse of the PM and hear him, over 5,000 people erupted in joy the moment they saw the three Indian Air Force choppers carrying Singh and his entourage landing at the helipad adjacent to the rally venue. 

"Arunachal is always dear to Congress since the Nehru-Gandhi era. Successive Congress governments at the Centre have always been working for the development of this Himalayan state as well as the entire North-East," said the PM, clad in a traditional Adi attire. 

Expressing his happiness over the huge turnout at the rally and congratulating the people of Arunachal for sending two Congress members to the Lok Sabha, he said, "It was Indiraji (Indira Gandhi) who had provided the Union Territory status to Arunachal, while former prime minister Rajiv Gandhi was instrumental in granting it statehood in 1987." 

"Arunachal needs a government that can work for development and only Congress can ensure this," he said. "Congress is the only party that can provide a stable and transparent government and work for the interests of the aam aadmi," he added. 

The PM said the Rs 24,000-crore development package that he had announced last year was aimed at bringing Arunachal on a par with other developed states in the country. 

Singh lauded the state government for maintaining transparency while executing the schemes under the package. He said, "The third party monitoring mechanism introduced by the state government with the help of panchayat leaders to implement the package is praiseworthy." 

To promote commercialisation of agriculture, generate income and facilitate remunerative prices to the farming community, the state government has established Krishi Vigyan Kendras at Dirang, Balek and Deomali, he said. "Besides, it has started construction of three cold storages one each in Dirang, Namsai and Ruksi to fulfil the need of fruit-growers," Singh added.

Veteran questions Maoist fight






New Delhi, Oct. 3: One of India’s topmost anti-Naxalite strategists has questioned the Centre’s new “crackdown-first development-later” credo and warned that any use of air power against Maoists could saddle the nation with “Afghanistan and Iraq-like” security liabilities.
“Development must go hand in hand with the fight against Naxalites; deprived people in the heartland cannot be expected to wait on their misery until the government is done with its long-haul campaigns,” Mahendra Kumawat, who retired as director-general of the BSF last month, told The Telegraph today.
“The government is going to lose more hearts and minds to the Maoists if it forges ahead with a strike policy that brings nothing but bloodshed and disruption to people in the affected zones. That is going to multiply our problems, not solve them. I wish the government all the best, but it isn’t going to work.”
The scorch-then-salve policy, advocated for long by hardline think-tanks, has found favour with home minister P. Chidambaram, but it has also alarmed sceptics within the security establishment who believe strictly police solutions are a “counter-productive half measure”. Recently unshackled by retirement, Kumawat may be articulating their concerns.
Kumawat speaks from a decade’s “on ground” experience of dealing with Naxalites in the Andhra-Orissa-Chhattisgarh triangle. Before assuming command of the BSF, he was also chairman of the national anti-Naxalite task force in the Union home ministry during Shivraj Patil’s tenure as internal security boss.
Kumawat wouldn’t take names, but he made it apparent that his experience as head of the national co-ordination desk in North Block did not inspire too much optimism over the anti-Naxalite offensive in the works under Chidambaram.
“We may think nationally but we do not act nationally,” he said. “There is little or no co-ordination between states which are actually as big as countries. West Bengal, for instance, would not share information with Jharkhand. There are debilitating turf battles between various agencies, intelligence is routinely held back or delayed, and most of the intelligence and documentation we have is poor in any case. All that needs to change if the government is to have half a chance of success.”
The retired top cop was critical of the manner in which governments approached the “very alarming” Naxalite challenge, saying: “We don’t prepare well enough. Information is critical and it is not available in the market, it has to be gathered and analysed all the time and over a long period of time. How many of our states have done that? Probably Andhra Pradesh, and they have had some success to show for homework done. But the same cannot be said for the rest. We are ill-prepared.”
Asked whether there was virtue to Chidambaram’s argument that Naxalite-dominated areas first needed to be “cleansed” of their “disruptive dominance” before development initiatives can be effectively mounted, Kumawat said: “Well, the home minister has himself said this will be a long battle, how long are people to wait for the welfare state to come to them? The challenge and the ingenuity of governance lies is doing both at the same time, the security component will have to be built in to development projects, as has been successfully done in parts of the Northeast. It may be tough to do, but that is what governments are about.”
Cautioning against using too hard a hand, Kumawat said: “We are hearing things about the use of the Indian Air Force, but the government should be extremely careful it is only logistical use, nothing else. And even so, the Naxalites are very capable of trapping the air force in ugly situations where they will have no option but to retaliate. Once that begins to happen, there will be the huge risk of collateral damage to populations and further alienation. The Naxalites are clever tacticians, they will engage and scoot, innocent people will get killed, you will have mess on your hands. Look at what the drone attacks are doing in Afghanistan and Iraq.”
He sounded utterly unsurprised by indications emerging from Naxalite circles that they plan a bloody cat-and-mouse with security forces in the weeks and months to come.
“If they are talking of encircling the government rather than getting encircled, it is nothing to scoff at or be smug about. That is classical Maoist tactic -- you go looking for them in their strongholds and you find they have melted away, their mobility is an advantage they employ to the hilt,” Kumawat said, adding that this Naxalite tactic, too, bedevils government plans.
“They will melt away, or just merge with populations. An operation, even if it is based on good and specific tip-offs, can end up hurting innocent people and creating greater disaffection against the state.”


http://www.telegraphindia.com/1091004/jsp/frontpage/story_11571487.jsp