Kashmir Sentinel Logo
  LARGEST  CIRCULATED  ENGLISH  MONTHLY OF J&K
           A News Magazine of Kashmiri Pandit Community
| Home | April 2002 Issue |
 <<< Back
  Site Index
Home
Appeal
Margdarshan
Homeland Resolution
Security, Honour & Dignity
Why Homeland?
Facts Speak
Misc Publications
Islamic Fundamentalism
Atrocities in Kashmir
Kashmir History
Legal Documents
Songs in Exile
Video Clips
 

JOIN US AT

 

CLICK HERE FOR

OUR BLOG SECTION


Milchar

E-mail this page
Print this page
Feedback
 

JK politicians drag army in unnecessary controversy

KS Correspondent

JAMMU, Apr 6: An unseemly controversy has been created by some state-level politicians and a section of regional media to malign the image of the Indian Army. Following the sensationalizing of a report related to proposed recruitment on April 21 for Army, in a Jammu English daily, two MLAs belonging to CPM and BSP raised the issue in the ongoing session of State Assembly. The two members known for anti-BJP stand tried to link the recruitment advertisement to the BJP’s alleged anti-Muslim bias. Responding to the debate, the Chief Minister, Dr Abdullah assured that he would take up the matter with the Ministry of Defence and the Prime Minister. The advertisement had mentioned that in that particular recruitment rally there was no vacancy for Muslims and tradesmen categories. Controversy was uncalled for because it was self-explanatory. Since tradesmen also did not have any vacancy, there was no question of anti-Muslim bias. Neither the English daily nor the two MLAs bothered to seek clarification from the Army.

Indian Army, it may recalled, has still not discarded the colonial tradition of recruitment based on alloting vacancies categorywise. There is no bias against any one. Army had already conducted two rallies in Rajouri and Samba, in which recruits were only Muslims. Hindu and Sikh vacancies were not filled up. There were no vacancies left for Muslims and tradesmen candidate for Akhnoor rally. Recruitment in army is based on intake from all categories so that equal opportunities are provided to one and all. Vacancies are filled biannually and categories to be filled are advertised accordingly.

The army in its rejoinder clarified that the reference to the two categories in the ad was specifically intended to avoid inconvenience to candidates of particular categories who would otherwise have to travel from far flung areas to Akhnoor. It attributed the controversy to biased reporting in the press.

General Padmanabhan, who sought clarifications from Army recruitment authorities and the Northern Command, was told that during Rajouri and Samba rallies six months earlier not a single Sikh or Hindu candidate had been recruited in the Army. Akhnoor rally was meant to fill the vacancies in the Dogra Regiment and the Sikh Light Infantry unit and the quota for. On Sikh and Hindus had to be filled. Keeping tradesmen out of the recruitment, it referred to those who have come out from ITIs, because there is a separate recruitment.

Despite the aversion of Kashmiris for joining Army, the J&K Light Infantry has a sizeable number of Muslim soldiers and officers. Even during the last ten years of turmoil more than seventy percent of the surrendered militants from Kashmir valley were recruited in paramilitary organizations like CRPF and BSF. As on today, 3683 surrendered militants are serving in these two orgnisations. The process of enlarging recruitment of Kashmiri Muslims in Army, CRPF and BSF was started by former Governor Jagmohan in 1990. No security agency or belt force anywhere in the world can recruit people without ascertaining the individuals’s background and commitment to the country he intends to serve. Indian Army and the Paramilitary forces have never discriminated in recruitment.

Previous

Index

 
Periodicals
Kashmir Herald
Unmesh
Milchar
Vitasta

Mailing Lists



 

 | Home  | Disclaimer | Privacy Statement | Feedback |

Back to Panun Kashmir Page

Copyrights © 2000-2020 Panun Kashmir. All Rights Reserved.