Tag: Indian Army

  • There will be no rollback of Agnipath military recruitment scheme: Lt Gen Anil Puri

    By Online Desk

    NEW DELHI: Amid protests and agitations against the newly-launched Agnipath recruitment scheme for the military, Lt Gen Anil Puri, Additional Secretary, Dept of Military Affairs, on June 19 clarified the scheme will be implemented and there is no question of a rollback. He also clarified that all recruitment will be through the Agnipath scheme only.

    Lt Gen Puri was addressing a joint military briefing on the Agnipath recruitment scheme with Air Marshal SK Jha, Vice Admiral Dinesh Tripathi, and LG C Bansi Ponnappa.

    He also stated that the Agniveers would get the same allowance in areas like Siachen and other areas which are applicable to the regular soldiers serving at present. “No discrimination against them in service conditions,” he added.

    “Coming to the rollback of the scheme. Why should it be rolled back? It is the only progressive step to making the country young. Why is it being made young? We are tinkering with Desh ki Raksha (national security). There is no space. I will give you an example. Do you know how many casualties are reported just for health purposes from high-altitude areas? Do read about it, then you would come to know why being (sic) young is important,” the officer said.

    Calling this reform ‘long-pending’, Lt Gen Puri said, “We want a mix of josh and hosh and that is why we wanted to reduce the age profile. The average age is 32 years at present and we want to reduce it as per the recommendations of the Kargil review committee and Arun Singh committee report,” Lt Gen Puri said.

    Referring to the provisions of reservations in different ministries, Lt Gen Puri said that announcements were pre-planned and not in reaction to the arson and agitation which took place after the Agnipath scheme announcement. He also clarified that all recruitment will be through the Agnipath scheme only.

    He said around 17,600 people from the three services are taking premature retirement from the three services every year. “No one ever tried to ask them what they will do after retirement,” he stated. 

    On the protests and acts of violence happening across the country, Lt General Puri said, “Indian Army’s foundation is discipline. No space for arson, vandalism. Every individual will have to take a pledge that they were not part of protests or vandalism”. He said that the individual against whom an FIR is lodged would not be allowed to join the forces. All candidates will have to give a written pledge that they did not indulge in any arson/violence, he added.

    Implementation plans announced

    “Registration process for the first batch of Agniveers will start from June 24 and from July 24, phase 1 online examination process will begin”, said Air Marshal Jha. He informed that the first batch would be enrolled by December and training would commence by December 30.

    Talking about the recruitment process in Indian Navy, Vice Admiral Dinesh Tripathi said the first batch of naval Agniveers will start reaching the training establishment INS Chilka in Odisha from November 21. He also made clear that both males and females will be recruited through the Agnipath scheme.

    “The Indian Navy has 30 women officers at present sailing on different Indian Navy ships. We have decided that under the Agnipath scheme, we will recruit women also. They will be deployed on warships,” the Navy official added.

    “By December, we will get the first batch of 25,000 Agniveers and the second batch would be inducted around February 2023 making it 40,000,” said Lt Gen Bansi Ponappa.

    Lt Gen Puri that the Centre will start with the recruitment of 46,000 Army aspirants to ‘analyse’ the scheme. “In next 4 to 5 years, our intake (of soldiers) will be 50,000-60,000 and will increase to 90,000 to 1 lakh subsequently. We’ve started small at 46,000 to analyse the scheme… and to build up infra capacity,” he said.

    “Our intake of ‘Agniveers’ will go up to 1.25 lakhs in near future and will not remain at 46,000 which is the present figure”, the officer added.

    READ HERE | Agnipath: All you need to know about Army recruitment scheme that has India on the boil

    (With inputs from PTI and ANI)

  • Agnipath scheme will shatter our dreams, spoil our careers: Jarkhand army aspirants

    By PTI

    RANCHI: Rohit Kumar Singh is a worried young man. He fears his dreams of carving out a life as a soldier in the Indian Army may well be a chimera once the new Agnipath scheme rolls out.

    The son of a fruit seller in Jharia area of Jharkhand’s Dhanbad district, Singh has strived for three years and cleared the physical and medical examinations for recruitment in the armed forces.

    He was waiting for the written examination, which was pending due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Now, he is worried that his dream of joining the armed forces will be shattered due to the Agnipath scheme.

    Under the scheme, youngsters between 17.5 and 23 years of age will be recruited for a period of four years, following which 75 per cent of them will have to take compulsory retirement sans pension while the remainder will continue serving.

    The selection will be made based on their performance. “I have cleared physical and medical examinations in 2019 and 2020 respectively. We were told that the written test will be conducted once the COVID-19 situation normalises.”

    “We were hopeful that the examination will be conducted soon as the pandemic situation is normal now. However, suddenly we see that the government has introduced this new Agnipath scheme, under which all examinations will be conducted,” Singh said.

    The aspirant said he has prepared for several years for the permanent service commission, and not for contractual employment of only four years. Singh is not alone in expressing his grievances.

    He and 10 other aspirants who practice together at Jharia’s Lodhna Ground and have qualified for the written examination, face a similar fate.

    These aspirants, along with hundreds of others, had staged protests against the Agnipath scheme in different parts of Dhanbad district on Friday. They had also blocked railway tracks, forcing railway authorities to cancel five trains.

    Sagar Kumar, another aspirant, said, “We demand rollback of the new scheme as it will not only shatter our dreams of serving the nation but also spoil our careers.” Similar protests were witnessed in other districts including Bokaro, Palamu and East Singhbhum.

    Railway and road traffic were disrupted in many areas. In Palamu, protesters pelted a goods train with stones at Daltonganj Railway Station, prompting the police to resort to lathi-charge to control the situation.

    Agitators had also blocked railway tracks in Bokaro station. A similar protest was witnessed in Jamshedpur. Sociologists, however, feel the protests are a natural reaction because of shrinking employment opportunities.

    “Armed and police forces have been a major source of employment for youths, especially those from rural areas. These jobs also contributed to their economic and social upliftment. “They don’t find Agnipath scheme lucrative as they fear they won’t find jobs after four years of service amid rising unemployment. The protests are natural reaction and not politically motivated although political parties may try to cash in on the situation,” Dr Prabhat Kumar Singh, associate professor at the Sociology Department of Ranchi University said.

    As per monthly unemployment data provided by the Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy (CMIE), Jharkhand’s unemployment rate in May was 13.1 per cent.

    Meanwhile, the state’s ruling alliance partners JMM and Congress have protested against the scheme and demanded its rollback. “We see our jawans with pride.But the Centre is trying to undermine that pride by employing them for only four years, after which 75 per cent will have to work as security guards at ATMs or man the gates of restaurants,” JMM spokesperson Supriyo Bhattacharya said.

    State Congress chief Rajesh Thakur said, “The Centre is playing with the future of the youths by introducing this short-term recruitment scheme.”

  • ‘Army to get its Agniveers by mid-2023’: Army Chief on new recruitment scheme

    Express News Service

    NEW DELHI: Amidst the announcement of a new recruitment scheme leading to violence at multiple places in the country the armed forces have announced initiating the process to induct the first batches of Agniveers.

    Army Chief General Manoj Pande on Friday said, “Training of first Agniveers will begin in December 2022, active service to commence in middle of 2023”

    Talking about the process to expand the recruitment base, “The decision of the Government has been received to grant a one-time waiver, increasing the entry age of recruitment to 23 years, for the recruitment cycle of 2022.” Pande said.

    The COVID-19 pandemic had led to virtual halt on inductions. While the Army recruited jawans in 2019-2020, and there has been no entrance since then. On the other hand the Indian Navy and Indian Air Force have both recruited in the previous two years.

    Sources in the Army confirmed that a notification regarding the Agnipath recruitment will be issued in two days.

    Speaking on the issue Air Force Chief Air Chief marshal VR Chaudhari said, “I am pleased to inform that the upper age limit for the first induction has been increased to 23 years,” and “This change would permit a larger section of the youth to enrol Agniveer. The selection process for the Air Force will start from Jun 24,” he said.

    The government recently announced the Agnipath Scheme under which the youth will be inducted into the Armed Forces initially for four years. Once the four year service is over all of them will leave and a re-induction process will be held to take in 25 percent from them to serve as permanent cadre of the forces. As per the government aim of the scheme is to make the military youthful.

    It is since then that protests against the scheme started.

    Speaking on the matter Admiral R. Hari Kumar said, “I didn’t anticipate any protests like this. We worked on the Agnipath scheme for almost a year & half…It’s single biggest Human Resources Management transformation in Indian military…Protests are happening due to misinformation and misunderstanding of the scheme”

    According to a statement issued by the Ministry of Defence on Tuesday, the Agnipath initiative is intended to help the Armed Forces maintain a young profile. It will provide young people who want to wear the uniform a chance by recruiting young talent from the society who are more in sync with current technology trends and returning skilled, disciplined, and motivated personnel to society.

    “This decision will provide an opportunity for many of our young, energetic and patriotic youth who, despite the COVID pandemic, were preparing to join the recruitment rallies, which couldn’t be completed in the last two years due COVID restrictions.” The Army Chief said.

  • Agnipath scheme: Amidst protests, Government issues clarification to bust the Myths

    Express News Service

    NEW DELHI: As the violent protest against Agnipath, the new recruitment scheme for the Armed Forces, the government on Thursday issued a clarification on the Myths and Facts on Agnipath Program saying that the new scheme will not only open several avenues but will also bring financial support and also priority to join Central Armed Police Forces. 

    The clarification also touched upon the issues like operational effectiveness, regimental systems and the myth that the scheme was implemented without consultation with the serving armed forces officers.

    There will be a financial package of around Rs 11.71 lakh to be given to each of the recruits at the end of the four-year tenure from the ‘Seva Nidhi Package’, which will provide financial independence to the youths and even help them to venture into entrepreneurship.

    Under the new scheme, the Army is expected to induct around 40,000 soldiers, the Navy is expected to intake around 3,000 sailors and the IAF is set to recruit 3,000 airmen this year.  

    Myth: Future of Agniveers is insecure

    Facts: For those wishing to be entrepreneurs – they will get a financial package and bank loan scheme. For those wishing to study further- they will be given a 12 class equivalent certificate and bridging course for further studies.

    For those wishing to obtain jobs- they will be given priority in CAPFs and State Police. Several avenues are also being opened up for them in other sectors.

    Myth: Opportunities for youth will decrease as a result of Agnipath

    Facts: Opportunities for youth to serve in armed forces will increase. In the coming years, recruitment of Agniveers will be around triple of the current recruitment in the armed forces.

    Myth: Regimental bonding will be affected

    Facts: No change is being done to the Regimental system. In Fact it will be further accentuated because the best of Agniveers will be selected, further boosting cohesiveness of the unit.

    Myth: This will harm the effectiveness of the Armed Forces

    Facts: Such a short-term enlistment system exists in most countries and hence is already tested out and considered best practice for a youthful and agile army.

    The numbers of Agniveers to be recruited in the first year would only make up 3% of the armed forces.

    Additionally, the performance of the Agniveers will be tested before re-induction in the army after four years. Hence Army will get tested and tried personnel for supervisory ranks.

    Myth: 21-year-olds are immature and unreliable for the army

    Facts: Most armies across the world depend upon their youths.

    At no point of time will there be more youngsters than experienced people. The present scheme will only bring about a right mix of 50%-50%, slowly in the very long run, of youngsters and experienced supervisory ranks.

    Myth: Agniveers will be a danger to society & join terrorists

    Facts: This is an insult to the ethos and values of the Indian armed forces.

    Youngsters who have worn the uniform for four years will remain committed to the country for the rest of their lives.

    Even now thousands retire from armed forces with skills etc. but there have not been any instances of them joining anti-national forces.

    Myth: No Consultation for former armed forces officers

    Facts: Extensive consultations with serving armed forces officers for the last two years.

    The proposal has been framed by the Department of Military Officers staffed by Military officers. The department itself is a creation of this government.

    Many former officers have recognized the advantages of the scheme and welcomed it. 

  • BJP allies in Bihar demand withdrawal of ‘Agniapth’s scheme amid protests in state

    Express News Service

    PATNA: BJP allies in Bihar have demanded immediate withdrawal of ‘Agnipath’ or ‘Agniveer’ scheme launched by the central government for short-term recruitment of Army personnel across the country.

    Reacting to violent protest by job aspirants across the state over ‘Agnipath’ scheme, JD-U parliamentary board chairperson and former union minister Upendra Kushwaha said on Thursday that the union government should do a rethink on the scheme.

    Kushwaha further said, “The proposed changes in recruitment policy of Indian Army, Navy and Airforce should be reconsidered. The widespread protest not only in Bihar but in other parts of the country shows job aspirants’ angst against the scheme.”

    Earlier, JD-U minister Bijendra Prasad Yadav had also demanded the withdrawal of the proposed scheme. 

    “The students are protesting against ‘Agnipath’ scheme. In this case, the centre should talk to youths and their unions. The central government should also seek suggestions from people on the issue,” Yadav had said.

    HAM’s patron and former chief minister Jitan Ram Manjhi also corroborated the statement of JD-U leaders. Manjhi said, “Agnipath scheme is very dangerous for the country. It should be withdrawn immediately. I appeal from PM Narendra Modi to withdraw the proposed scheme and restore the old policy of recruitment in the Indian Army.”

    On the other hand, RJD’s young wing has threatened to burn effigies of PM Narendra Modi and Defence minister Rajnath Singh over the ‘Agnipath’ scheme in the state on Friday. Bihar witnessed widespread protest against the scheme for the last two days.

    Meanwhile, BJP Rajya Sabha member and former deputy chief minister Sushil Kumar Modi urged the Bihar government to adopt the central government’s ‘Agnipath’ policy in the recruitment process in the state. He appealed to protesting students not to indulge in damaging government property.

    He also condemned the attack on BJP MLA Aruna Devi in Nawada, on the house of another leader C N Gupta in Saran and vandalising of the offices of BJP in Nawada and Madhubani districts. 

    “The anti-socials have joined the protest. The authorities concerned should take action against them,” junior Modi asserted.

  • Amid protests, Modi government increases upper-age limit to 23 for recruitment under Agnipath scheme

    By Online Desk

    NEW DELHI: The government on Thursday increased the upper-age limit to 23 years from 21 years for recruitment under the Agnipath scheme for the year 2022 amid widespread protests against the new model for enrolment of soldiers into the three services.

    Unveiling the scheme on Tuesday, the government had said the entry age for all new recruits will have to be between 17 and a half and 21 years.

    “Cognizant of the fact that it has not been possible to undertake the recruitment during the last two years, the government has decided that a one-time waiver shall be granted for the proposed recruitment cycle for 2022,” a defence ministry spokesperson said.

    He said the upper-age limit for the recruitment process under the Agnipath scheme for 2022 has been increased to 23 years.

    Trains were set afire, public and police vehicles attacked and personnel injured as protests over ‘Agnipath’ swept across several states on Thursday amid partisan political voices in favour and against the new recruitment scheme for the defence forces that has set off a firestorm.

    ALSO READ | Defence veterans divided over cause of protests against ‘Agnipath’ scheme as government faces heat

    From Bihar’s Ara to Haryana’s Palwal, from Agra in Uttar Pradesh to Gwalior and Indore in BJP-ruled Madhya Pradesh, hundreds of young aspirants for jobs in the armed forces took to the streets, pouring their anger on public and private property.

    Bihar bore the brunt of the violence with trains set ablaze, window panes of buses smashed and passersby, including a ruling BJP MLA, pelted with stones on Thursday, the second day of the protest against the scheme which envisages a short four-year term for soldiers in the three armed forces entailing no gratuity or pension upon retirement.

    Police fired teargas shells and used batons to break up protests by angry youngsters who blocked railway tracks, threw burning tyres on roads, and performed push-ups and other drills on the streets against the new recruitment policy.

    In Nawada, the vehicle of BJP MLA Aruna Devi, who was on her way to a court, was attacked by the agitators, leaving five persons, including the legislator, injured.

    Railway property was vandalised and protesters set fire to stationary carriages at Bhabhua and Chhapra stations and smashed window panes of coaches at many places.

    Protesters torched government vehicles in Palwal, forcing the authorities to impose prohibitory orders and suspend mobile internet services to stop the spread rumours through social media platforms.

    Altogether 20 young men were rounded up over the violence.

    Five government vehicles were set on fire by the protesters while stones were thrown at the residence of the Palwal deputy commissioner.

    Protests also took place in Gurugram, Rewari, Charkhi Dadri, Hisar and Rohtak of Haryana.

    Violent demonstrations were held in Gwalior and Indore in Madhya Pradesh.

    Protesters hurled stones and set shops on fire near a railway station in Gwalior, affecting train operations.

    They also damaged a few shops, officials said, prompting police to baton-charge and fire tear-gas shells.

    A state-run bus was pelted with stones near Agra and hundreds of slogan-shouting youth staged protests in Bulandshahr and Ballia districts of Uttar Pradesh.

    Protests were also held in Jodhpur, Sikar, Jaipur, Nagaur, Ajmer and Jhunjhunu districts of Rajasthan but no violence was reported.

    Army aspirants, most of whom had cleared their medical and physical tests for recruitment last year and were awaiting the written examination, which has now been cancelled, protested in Jammu.

    “We submitted our forms for the recruitment in the Army in February 2020 but the process started a year later due to COVID-19 outbreak.

    The written test was initially scheduled for April 25 last year but was postponed several times,” Munish Sharma, an army aspirant, said.

    “Today, we came to know that the process for our recruitment stands cancelled and we have to re-apply in accordance with Agnipath. It is great injustice to us,” an exasperated Sharma said.

    Over 34 trains were cancelled and eight more partially cancelled due to the protests, railway sources said in New Delhi.

    They said 72 trains were also running late due to the agitation.

    As violent protests raged in multiple states, the government issued a clarification, asserting that the new model will not only bring in fresh capabilities to the armed forces but also open up avenues for youth in the private sector and help them become entrepreneurs with the aid of the severence package they will be entitled to on retirement.

    Apart from issuing a ‘Myth vs Facts’ document to address the concerns raised about the scheme, the government’s information dissemination arm issued a series of social media posts in its support.

    “The scheme will bring in new dynamism to the armed forces. It will help the forces bring in new capabilities and take advantage of the technical skills and fresh thinking of the youths. It will allow the youths to serve the nation,” the Press Information Bureau said in a Facebook post.

    ALSO READ | ‘No change being done to Army’s regimental system’: Government sources on Agnipath scheme

    Referring to the financial package of around Rs 11.71 lakh to be given to each of the recruits at the end of the four-year tenure from the ‘Seva Nidhi Package’, it said it will provide financial independence to the youth and even help them venture into entrepreneurship.

    On the criticism that the short tenure of ‘Agniveers’, the defence personnel recruited under the new system, will harm the effectiveness of the armed forces, government sources said such systems exist in several countries, and the one introduced in India is already “tested out and considered best practice for an agile army”.

    The numbers of ‘Agniveers’ to be recruited in the first year would only make up three per cent of the armed forces, they said, adding their performance will be tested before re-induction into the army after four years.

    “Hence Army will get tested and tried personnel for supervisory ranks,” they said.

    The sources said the new scheme will bring about a right mix of “50 per cent-50 per cent” youth and experience in the supervisory ranks in the long run.

    Political parties, predictably, reacted along partisan lines with the Opposition stepping up its attack on the government and demanding that the scheme be scrapped.

    “No rank, no pension, no direct recruitment for 2 years, no stable future after four years, no respect shown by the government for the army,” Congress leader Rahul Gandhi said in a tweet in Hindi.

    “Listen to the voice of unemployed youths of the country, don’t take ‘agnipareeksha’ of their patience by making them walk on ‘Agnipath’, Mr. prime minister,” the former Congress chief said.

    ALSO READ | Agnipath protests: Union ministers, CMs urge students not to be ‘deceived’; political blame game starts

    The Left parties, Samajwadi Party chief Akhilesh Yadav, BSP leader Mayawati and Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal also voiced displeasure over the scheme which the government insists is “transformative”.

    There was the lone voice of disapproval from the BJP–MP Varun Gandhi– who said the new reform will give rise to more disaffection among the youth.

    However, Union minister and BJP leader Ashwini Kumar Choubey and BJP chief ministers of Uttar Pradesh and Uttarakhand defended the scheme.

    Chaubey urged the youth protesting against the Agnipath scheme to stop their agitation and keep away from those inciting them, as he asserted that the initiative is in their interest and that of the armed forces and the country.

    Choubey, a senior party leader from Bihar where protests started first on Wednesday, also claimed that some people are using students for political gains.

    In a statement, he said Prime Minister Narendra Modi always thinks and works for the welfare of the youth and the nation.

    “We assure you that this programme is a constructive step to bring in long-term positive results. Lakhs of youngsters will not only benefit from this but nationalistic sentiments within them will also be strengthened,” Choubey said.

    Urging youngsters to not get “deceived”, Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath said the scheme will give a “new dimension” to their life.

    “Agneepath Yojana’ will give a new dimension to your life as well as give a golden base to the future. Don’t be deceived. Our ‘Agniveer’, determined to serve Mother Bharati, will be an invaluable fund of the nation and @UPGovt will give preference to Agniveers in police and other services, ” tweeted Adityanath in Hindi.

    His Uttarakhand counterpart Pushkar Singh Dhami said, “Uttarakhand’s association with the armed forces is well known.

    The history of the country’s armed forces is full of the stories of the valour of soldiers from our state which is also called sainyabhoomi (the land of soldiers).

    “Almost every family in Uttarakhand has someone in the armed forces. The Agnipath yojana is a good opportunity for the youth,” he told a press conference.

    However, former Punjab chief minister and BJP ally Amarinder Singh struck a note of caution and suggested a rethink on the Agnipath scheme.

    In a statement, he wondered why the government needed to make such “radical changes” in the recruitment policy, which has been working “so well for the country for so many years”.

    “Hiring soldiers for four years, with effective service of three years, is not at all militarily a good idea,” said Amarinder Singh, a former Army captain whose party Punjab Lok Congress is an ally of the BJP in Punjab.

    (With PTI Inputs)

  • Political backlash on Agnipath, veterans advised to proceed with caution; protests break out across India

    Express News Service

    NEW DELHI: The government’s new recruitment scheme Agnipath has stoked a major debate. While the government has termed it transformative, the lawmakers within the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and those in opposition have questioned the intentions of the government. Street Protests were held by youth at various places in the country.

    Congress Member of Parliament (MP) Rahul Gandhi termed it an “uncalled for” move that too at the time when India is facing threats on two fronts.

    Gandhi Tweeted, “When India faces threats on two fronts, the uncalled for Agnipath scheme reduces the operational effectiveness of our armed forces.”

    The BJP govt must stop compromising the dignity, traditions, valour & discipline of our forces, added Rahul.

    Questioning the short tenure of service of those who will get inducted under the scheme, BJP MP from Pilibhit Varun Gandhi wrote, “Even the government gets elected for five years. Then why only four years is given to the youth to serve the nation?”

    The Cabinet approved the “transformative” scheme Agnipath, the new recruitment scheme for the armed forces, on Tuesday. Under it around 46,000 youth between the ages of 17 and a half years and 21 years will be inducted into the Army, Navy and Air Force for a period of four years.

    One of the positives of the scheme is that this will make the age profile of the Units youthful.

    Under the old system youth between 16 and half years and 21 years were selected for a minimum of 15 years of service and used to get a pension for serving this much. Under the new scheme, 100 per cent of the recruits will leave after four years and then around 25 per cent will be taken back from among them under a fresh process and will serve on a permanent basis.

    The recruitment will be on an “all India-all class” basis which earlier was based on region as well as caste and used to serve in regiments like Dogra, Punjab, J&K, Rajput, Jat and Sikhs.

    As per Rashtriya Janata Dal leader Tejashwi Yadav such training and then left unemployed after four years might lead to law and order issue.

    “Under the Agnipath scheme a large population which is trained in using arms will get unemployed at the age of 22 years after serving for a temporary short period. Will it not lead to a law and order situation in the country?” he said.

    Lots of veterans expressed their angst against the scheme. Lieutenant General (retired) P R Shankar, wrote in his blog, “Many senior veterans have written with the wisdom of their experience. A common voice has emerged. The tour of duty does not seem to be a good idea. Proceed with caution.”

    Protests break out in Bihar, Rajasthan

    Army aspirants disrupted rail and road traffic in several parts of Bihar on Wednesday in protest against the “Agnipath” scheme which proposes the recruitment of jawans on a contractual basis for a four-year period followed by compulsory retirement for most without gratuity and pension benefits.

    In the Buxar district, more than 100 young men stormed the railway station and squatted on the tracks, blocking the onward journey of the Patna-bound Janshatabdi Express for nearly 30 minutes.

    They raised slogans against the scheme, unveiled the previous day by Defence Minister Rajnath Singh, until security personnel led by RPF inspector Deepak Kumar and GRP SHO Ramashish Prasad, arrived at the spot and warned them against disruption of rail traffic.

    There were reports in a section of the regional media that the protesters had hurled stones at Pataliputra Express, which passed through the station, though both Kumar and Prasad denied such an occurrence.

    In Muzaffarpur town, a large number of Army aspirants vented their ire by placing burning tyres on the roads around the sprawling “Chakkar Maidan” where they turn up in large numbers for physical tests which are mandatory for the recruitment of jawans.

    They said they were exasperated to learn about the new job rules which has come after two years of “no recruitment” by the armed forces despite their having passed the requisite physical tests.

    Many Army aspirants also marched towards the Collectorate where they submitted a memorandum to the District Magistrate.

    In Begusarai, Army aspirants, many of them NCC cadets, staged a demonstration at Mahadev Chowk where they carried a huge poster inscribed with the demand rollback of the Agnipath scheme.

    Meanwhile, leader of the opposition in the state, Tejashwi Yadav, came out with a flurry of tweets sharing his misgivings about the much-touted move by the Narendra Modi government at the Centre.

    The RJD leader expressed apprehensions that like contractual hiring in Railways and “lateral entry” in other government departments, Agnipath “will be used to do away with the constitutionally sanctioned reservation benefits”.

    The former Bihar Deputy CM also alleged “BJP and Sangh Parivar may use the scheme for providing arms training, at government expense, to its hate-filled supporters and fringe elements”.

    “As a result of the Agnipath scheme, many young men with military training will be rendered jobless at a tender age of 22. Will it not result in a major law and order problem in the country?”, he asked.

    He also asked, with a rhetorical flourish, whether the government expected youngsters recruited under the Agnipath scheme to spend rest of their lives working as security guards of “big capitalists friendly to the BJP”.

    He also took a dig at Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s announcement of 10 lakh government jobs till the end of next year and asked if the number “takes into account the 19 lakh jobs promised in Bihar” ahead of the 2020 assembly polls.

    Around 150 people blocked the Ajmer-Delhi highway on Wednesday in protest.

    According to Kardhani Station House Officer (SHO) Banwari Meena, around 150 protesters blocked the highway, demanding that recruitment into the armed forces should be done following the earlier method.

    The SHO said the protesters were subsequently dispersed and the highway was cleared, adding that 10 people were arrested.

    Here is what defence establishments are saying

    Chief of Staff of the Army’s Eastern Command Lt General K K Repswal on Wednesday said that recruitment of young soldiers under the ‘Agnipath’ scheme will provide availability of a trained pool in case of any requirement even after conclusion of their four-year term in the armed forces.

    “It’s a trained pool available to you and if the situation so demands, they can be called back,” he said at a press conference at the Eastern Command headquarters here at Fort William.

    Repswal said the Army will recruit 40,000 soldiers under this scheme, and the process would commence within three months.

    He said at present, only male candidates will be recruited.

    “Girls will also get a chance when the system stabilises.”

    Asserting that the “Agnipath’ scheme is to transform the Army to make it future-ready, Repswal said it provides for retention of 25 per cent of each batch for the regular forces, and the 75 per cent who leave after completion of four years will get preference in recruitment in central armed police forces and the Assam Rifles.

    The government had unveiled the scheme on Tuesday that will overhaul the decades-old selection process to bring in fitter and younger troops to tackle future security challenges facing the nation.

    Around 46,000 soldiers will be recruited this year between the ages of 17 and a half years and 21 years into the Army, Navy and the Air Force.

    “The Indian Army will recruit 25,000 ‘Agniveers’ in the next 180 days and the process for recruitment of the remaining 15,000 will begin a month after that,” Vice Chief of Army Staff Lt General B S Raju told PTI.

    He further said that the recruitment drive will be in all the 773 districts throughout the country.

    “It will cover every district of the country,” he added.

    Gen Raju said that the defence minister is empowered to make necessary changes according to operational requirements.

    The “Agnipath” scheme is being seen as a major overhaul of the decades-old selection process to bring in fitter and younger troops to deal with future security challenges facing the nation.

    The recruitment will be based on an “all-India, all-class” basis that is set to change the composition of some regiments that recruit youths from specific regions as well as castes.

    After completion of the four-year tenure of the recruits, the scheme provides for retaining 25 per cent of each specific batch for regular service, based on organisational requirements and policies promulgated by the armed forces from time to time.

    The four-year tenure under the new scheme will include around six months to eight months of training periods.

    Raju said the recruitment will give a younger profile to the Army and they will also quickly adapt to new technologies.

    Lieutenant General Arvind Walia, Chief of Staff, Southern Command, on Wednesday said the new ‘Agnipath’ scheme for recruitment in the armed forces is a “transformational reform” for the Army and the nation as it aims to bring paradigm changes in the Army’s human resource management.

    Speaking to reporters at the Southern Command headquarters, Lt General Walia said the concept of the scheme envisages the promotion of nationalism in the youth by offering skilled manpower to the society and ensuring a more youthful profile of the Army.

    “The Agnipath scheme is a transformational reform for the Army and the nation and aims to bring paradigm changes in the human resource management of the Indian Army,” he said.

    The southern commander also said the youthful profile of the Army will provide a fresh lease of “josh and jazba” (enthusiasm) while bringing about a transformational shift towards a more technical-savvy armed force, which is the need of the hour.

    The youths recruited under the scheme will be known as ‘Agniveers’.

    After completion of the four-year tenure, 25 per cent of the recruits from each specific batch would be offered regular service.

    The Lt General assured that there will be no compromise on the standards applied by the armed forces in ensuring the minimum physical, medical and professional parameters for recruits.

    He also said that during the implementation and stabilisation of the scheme, the Army’s operational capabilities and preparedness will be fully maintained.

    “I wish to emphatically state that the Army will continue to retain its rich legacy, history, traditions, military values and culture – based on the principles of cohesiveness, camaraderie, and the core ethos of ‘Naam, Namak and Nishan’”, he stated.

    It is envisaged that the average age profile of the Indian Armed forces would come down by about 4-5 years by the implementation of this scheme.

    “The dividends of short military service to the nation, society and the youth of the nation are immense.

    This includes the inculcation of patriotism, teamwork, enhancement of physical fitness, ingrained loyalty for the country and availability of trained personnel to boost national security in times of external threats, internal threats and natural disasters,” the Lt General said.

    He also said the scheme will lead to a much more youthful and technically adept war-fighting force by ensuring a fine balance between youthful and experienced personnel in the armed forces.

    The Lt General added that the first rally of the recruitment will be held within 90 days.

    The Indian armed forces will not compromise with the quality of cadets while recruiting young ‘Agniveers’ under the newly launched Agnipath scheme for four years, Air Marshal Manavendra Singh said on Wednesday.

    The Centre on Tuesday rolled out the Agnipath scheme offering four-year military training to youth from the ages 17.5 years to 21 years.

    After completing the training, the cadets may leave the service and make their own move or if they wish they can apply for regular enrolment in the military services, the Centre said while launching the scheme.

    “I would like to reassure you that it (Agnipath scheme) will work. The quality (of recruited cadets under Agnipath scheme) will not be compromised,” Air Marshal Singh, who is the Air Officer Commanding-in-Chief, Headquarters Training Command, Indian Air Force, told reporters here.

    He was replying to a query on the defence veterans criticising the Agnipath scheme.

    The Air Marshal said in the fast-changing world there cannot be just one way of doing things and insist upon doing things that they had been doing for the past 100 or 200 years.

    “There is no reason to believe that there isn’t just one way of doing things. Let’s give it (Agnipath scheme) a try. And I have really strong belief that it will succeed very well. It will be very well received by the youth of this country and we will benefit from it,” Air Marshal Singh said.

    He said in a democratic nation, everyone is free to voice their opinion.

    But as an expert of the subject, the IAF officer said the defence establishment can train people for all kinds of specialisations.

    To a query on reservation or preference in government jobs once the ‘Agniveers’ are out of service, Air Marshal Singh said they will be given preference in Central Armed Police Forces like CISF and Assam Rifles once their term is over.

    Further, the Agniveer cadets will be given a degree by the Indira Gandhi National Open University after completing four years of service, the Air Marshal said.

    According to him, the notification for the recruitment of Agniveer will be out shortly and it will take about 90 days for the selection process.

    There will be an all-India level exam, whose details will be available online, he added.

    “There will be a total of 250 centres all over India. We are doing it in collaboration with (Centre for Development of Advanced Computing) C-DAC. They’ve been our technology partners for the last couple of years,” Air Marshal Singh said.

    Stating that the exam will be conducted on a tried and tested system, he said the examination process works without any fear or favour, where there will be no scope for any intervention.

    “It’s absolutely a transparent and fair system where everybody has an equal opportunity to make his mark and get selected,” the IAF officer explained.

    Politicians disagree with the move

    BJP Lok Sabha member Varun Gandhi on Wednesday raised questions on the newly announced Agnipath scheme for recruitment of soldiers into the armed forces, saying a government is elected for five years then why are youths being given four years to serve the nation.

    Taking to Twitter, the Pilibhit MP, who has often been taking a divergent view from the party on various issues, shared a video of youngsters expressing their concerns about the transformative scheme that the government had on Tuesday unveiled for the recruitment of soldiers in the Army, Navy and the Air Force.

    Sharing the remuneration details of the new recruitment scheme for defence forces, Varun Gandhi in a tweet invited opinions about this plan while adding that there are many “questions and doubts” in the minds of the youths regarding the Agnipath scheme.

    Citing the video of youngsters who responded to his tweet, he said even government is elected for five years then why only youths are being given four years to serve the nation.

    Meanwhile, the BJP-led government at the Centre on Wednesday announced a raft of post-retirement employment possibilities for ‘Agniveer’ like a priority in recruitment to the central armed police forces (CAPF) and Assam Rifles.

    However, it failed to assuage the concerns of the opposition Congress which warned the scheme will reduce the operational effectiveness of the armed forces.

    RLP leader and Nagaur MP Hanuman Beniwal Wednesday opposed the scheme for the recruitment of soldiers on a short-term contractual basis and announced a protest against it on June 16.

    He said the government should withdraw the scheme, unveiled on Tuesday, and conduct rallies to recruit youths in the armed forces as earlier.

    “On June 16, the party joined by youths will lodge protests at all district headquarters of the state (Rajasthan) against the contractual recruitment in the army and submit memoranda. The Centre should start army recruitment rallies and give two-year age relaxation to the youths,” Beniwal tweeted.

    He said there is a strong resentment among the youth against the Center for not holding army recruitment rallies for the last two years and not completing the process of recruitment rallies held earlier “and now due to the plan to recruit in the army on contract”.

    The “transformative” scheme called ‘Agnipath’ was announced by the government for the recruitment of soldiers in the Army, the Navy and the Air Force largely on a short-term contractual basis to cut the ballooning salary and pension bills and enable a youthful profile of the armed forces, Under the ‘Agnipath’ scheme, Indian youths will be provided an opportunity to serve in the armed forces as ‘Agniveer’.

    Beniwal said the Agneepath Scheme is a “joke” with the youths of the country.

    Recruiting young men into the army under the Agneepath scheme to give six-month weapon training and removing them after four years will lead to incidents of a gang war.

    The Centre should withdraw the scheme and recruit soldiers in the army as before, he said.

    Senior Congress leader Bhupinder Singh Hooda on Wednesday lashed out at the Centre over its “Agnipath” scheme, saying it neither favours the country nor the youth.

    He requested the government to reconsider and rationalise it by ensuring permanent jobs to soldiers who complete their four-year term in the armed forces.

    “It has far-reaching consequences and these have not been fully considered while preparing this scheme. In the long run, the policy would have a detrimental impact on our national security,” Hooda claimed in a statement here.

    “It seems the government is compromising with the security of the country with the intention of saving money on salary, pension, gratuity and halving the strength of the armed forces,” the former Haryana chief minister alleged.

    Hooda claimed that youth have become overaged due to the closure of Army recruitment for the past three years due to the Covid pandemic.

    “The hopes of the youth who had been waiting for the Army recruitment for the last many years and also those who had given written examination, physical test for Army recruitment and were waiting for the results have been dashed after the implementation of this new policy,” he said.

    The Congress leader demanded that the government should consider giving relaxation in age limit to the youth who have become overage in the past three years.

    Counting the shortcomings of the scheme, Hooda said 75 per cent of the soldiers who will be recruited in the army as Agniveers will be retired after four years.

    “No care has been taken about what will happen to their future. This plan does not live up to the tradition, nature, morals and values of the Army,” he said.

    “The period of training prescribed under the scheme is insufficient. Insufficient training can have a negative impact on the capability and effectiveness of the military. With just four years of service, the Army will start being treated as a tourist organisation,” he claimed.

    Hooda, who is Leader of Opposition in the Haryana Assembly, said regimental honour is very strong part of the tradition of our armed forces and recruits would lose their attachment to the name, insignia and the emotional connect with the regiment.

    “The government is talking about giving a lumpsum amount of Rs 11.71 lakh as a service fund to the Agniveers who will be forced out from the Army after four years while the truth is that only half of this fund belongs to the government and half will be the money of the soldiers’ earnings,” he said.

    He asked the government to clearly answer if an Agniveer, who is unemployed after four years of service, will be able to spend his entire life with Rs 11.71 lakh.

    “They will get neither pension, military hospital nor canteen facility after four years of service,” he said.

    The army of the youth who have completed four years of service will be forced to search for jobs, he said.

    “Such unemployed youth who know how to use weapons can easily be misled, which can prove to be a serious threat to society. I urge the government to reconsider this scheme and take a decision keeping in mind the larger interest of the country and society,” he said.

    (With PTI Inputs)

  • Night trial of surface-to-surface nuclear capable short-range ballistic missile Prithvi II successful

    Express News Service

    BHUBANESWAR: India on Wednesday successfully conducted a night trial of surface-to-surface nuclear capable short-range ballistic missile Prithvi-II from a defence base off Odisha coast.

    Defence sources said that mounted on a mobile tatra transporter-erector launcher the indigenously developed Prithvi-II was launched in salvo mode from the launching complex III at the Integrated Test Range (ITR) at about 7.30 pm.

    The test was conducted by the Strategic Forces Command (SFC) of the Indian army as part of an operational exercise. The mission was of greater significance as the system was tested in its deliverable configuration by the army.

    This was the second night trial of a missile in the last 10 days. On June 6, the army had successfully conducted the first night trial of a 4000-km range nuke-tipped Agni IV missile from Abdul Kalam Island.

    The night trial of Prithvi II assumed significance as the missiles fired in the dark are difficult to be tracked and shot down. The test reconfirmed its operational readiness. The missile can be fired anytime and in any terrain in short notice.

    A naval ship positioned at the target tracked and monitored the missile hitting the target very accurately. All the radars and other sensors along the east coast monitored the missile’s trajectory parameters.

    “The successful test was part of routine user training launches carried out by the SFC. The successful test reaffirms India’s policy of having a credible minimum deterrence capability,” a defence official said.

    Fired in full operational configuration, the weapon system destroyed the target and achieved single-digit accuracy reaching close to zero circular error probability.

    “The entire flight path of the missile was smooth in accordance with pre-decided coordinates. The mission parameters met successfully as per the coordination,” the official said.

    The successful training exercises indicate India’s operational readiness to meet any eventuality and also establish the reliability of the deterrent component of the country’s strategic arsenal.

    Prithvi-II can carry a warhead up to one tonne and destroy targets at a distance of 350 km. The nine-metre tall missile having a diameter of 1.1-metre diameter is thrust by liquid propulsion twin engine and uses an advanced inertial guidance system with a manoeuvring trajectory.

  • ‘India to have its first hypersonic missile in next six years’: BrahMos CEO

    Express News Service

    NEW DELHI: India will have the first hypersonic missile in its arsenal in the next six years, informed the BrahMos Aerospace on Monday.

    Atul Rane, CEO and MD, BrahMos Aerospace said, “BrahMos Aerospace is capable of making hypersonic missiles. In five to six years, we will be able to have our first hypersonic missile by BrahMos”.

    Rane was speaking at an event to launch the ‘Silver Jubilee Year’ celebration (1998-2023) to mark the incredible journey of BrahMos military partnership programmes producing cruise missile BrahMos. BrahMos Aerospace, an India-Russian joint venture was established in 1998.

    The ‘Silver Jubilee Year’ celebrations would begin on June 12 and would end on February 12, 2023, on ‘BrahMos Raising Day.’ The celebrations will include several key events, meets, and competitions at the national level.

    Towards the process of attaining the hypersonic speed, India successfully tested Hypersonic Technology Demonstrator Vehicle (HSTDV) in September by integrating scramjet engine technology.

    The HSTDV technology will be assisting the country to develop futuristic space assets like long-range missile systems and aerial platforms.

    The HSTDV is capable of powering missiles to attain a speed of around Mach 6 or six times the speed of sound. Only a very few countries like the US, Russia and China have such a capability.

    India not only has armed the three services with the BrahMos Missiles but has also started exporting it. As reported earlier by this newspaper the Philippines Department of National Defence approved a $374.96 million (Rs 2700 cr) contract for the purchase of a shore-based anti-ship missile system from India.

    As per the initial deal The Philippines will get three missile batteries of missile system which has a range of 290 kilometres and a speed of 2.8 Mach (thrice the speed of sound).

    India has been in talks with Indonesia, Vietnam and Thailand and few other nations that have shown interest in the system.

    The work is already on to extend the range of BrahMos missiles which can be launched from submarines, ships, aircraft or land.

  • Mon killings: Army promises action against erring personnel

    Express News Service

    GUWAHATI: The Army on Monday said action as per the Army Act would be taken against any solders found to have committed lapses during the December 4, 2021 botched ambush at Oting in Nagaland’s Mon district that left 13 civilians and an Army jawan dead.

    The Army’s Eastern Commander Lt Gen Rana Pratap Kalita said the Army court of enquiry was completed and the report was being examined.

    “We also received the report of the Special Investigation Team constituted by the Nagaland government. Both the reports are being analysed to identify the lapses that have taken place during the conduct of the operation,” Gen Kalita told journalists in Guwahati.

    “Let me assure you that any fault which we identify, requisite action will be taken against those individuals irrespective of their ranks or who they are,” he said.

    The senior Army officer, who hails from Assam, said the Army was conscious of the fact that there had been an increase in recruitment by the Paresh Baruah faction of insurgent group United Liberation Front of Asom-Independent or ULFA-I. He said not only the youth from upper Assam but also from lower Assam were joining the militant organisation.

    “Most of these recruitments have taken place through the social media where they were motivated. I was given to understand most of them have a criminal background,” Gen Kalita said.

    But violence has no place in any society and resorting to violence to resolve any issue is not the way, he said.

    Talking about the situation on the China border, he said since it had not been demarcated, it often leads to perception differences.

    “But we have mechanisms in place in accordance with existing bilateral agreements and protocols to defuse tension and work towards peace along the LAC (line of actual control),” Gen Kalita said.

    China has developed a lot of infrastructure in Tibet which includes the construction of railway line that connects Lhasa to Chinese heartland. They have also constructed a lot of highways, certain roads in forward areas which connect the passes along the LAC, upgraded airports and helipads while additional areas have been taken to ensure the stationing of more aircraft and helicopters, he said.

    “One reason of concern for us is some villages, which are located close to the LAC, have the possibility of dual use. They can be used for civilians as well as to mobilise troops to the forward areas,” the Army officer said.

    They have also developed their communication infrastructure. There is the availability of 5G mobile connectivity. All these infrastructure developments give them the capability to mobilise troops from the camps in a shorter time, he said.

    “So, we all are conscious of this factor and requisite steps are being taken to develop infrastructure. One of the challenges for us is inclement weather and difficult terrain. The Himalayan mountains on our side are quite unstable and prone to landslides during monsoon. Then, during winter, there is heavy snowfall all along the LAC which leaves us with limited working period,” Gen Kalita said.

    He said there is a shortage of people to work in those areas. What compounded the problem is that people from outside are not willing to come and work there while there is outmigration of the border villagers to plains areas.

    Over the past few years, hundreds of villagers have moved to towns and other areas in Arunachal in search of a better future.