Friday, July 31, 2020

THE RAFALE SAGA: Delayed Timelines, Cost Escalation and an Executive Decision

A proposal for the purchase of 126 MMRCA (Medium Range Multi Role Combat Aircraft) was first mooted by the IAF to the Vajpayee led NDA government in 2000 CE. On acceptance, the initial RFI (Request for Information) was issued in 2001. Meanwhile, the Congress led UPA government came into power in 2004 and the Defence Acquisition Council (DAC) headed by the then Defence Minister, Shri AK Antony gave clearance for the purchase of 126 MMRCA, post which the RFP (Request for Proposal) was issued in June 2007. The RFP was earlier planned to be issued in December 2005, but the timeline was delayed as a new Defence Procurement Procedure (DPP) was put in place in 2005 and there was a need to fine tune the offset policy under DPC 2005. The concept of total life cycle costs had been introduced for  the first time in Indian defence procurements and was reportedly a major source of the delay. 


Six companies shortlisted during the RFI process were issued the RFP for the procurement of 126 MMRCA of which 18 aircraft were to procured in “fly away condition” and the balance 108 aircraft were to be built by Hindustan Aeronautical Limited (HAL) under transfer of technology (TOT). These were Dassault Aviation (France) for Rafale, Eurofighter Typhoon (multi national), RAC-MiG (Russia) for the MiG 35 Fulcrum, SAAB International (Sweden) for JAS39 Gripen, Boeing (USA) for F/A-18E/F Super Hornet and Lockheed Martin (USA) for the F-16 IN Super Viper. Technical evaluations of the six aircraft were thereafter undertaken by the IAF, followed by field trials in August 2009. By early 2010, the evaluation of all the aircraft had been completed and in April of that year, the six firms were requested to forward their updated bids. By April 2011, two bids had been shortlisted for the purchase of MMRCA—Dassault Aviation for its Rafale and Eurofighter for its Typhoon. The final bids made by both were opened on 4 November 2011 and on 31 January and Dassault Rafale was selected for exclusive negotiations.


Looked at holistically, this was a well considered choice as the IAF already had 49 operational Mirage 2000 jets manufactured by Dassault Aviation as well as 92 operational Jaguar jets produced by HAL in technical collaboration with he same company. The defence minister confirmed that Dassault Aviation would supply 18 Rafale MMRCA in fly away condition and that the remaining 108 fighters would be manufactured by HAL under TOT and that the contract would be signed after march 2012. Meanwhile, in February 2012, Dassault Aviation signed an Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with Mukesh Ambani’s Reliance Industries Limited (RIL) to form a joint venture to explore joint opportunities in the defence sector and cooperation in the execution of the MMRCA (Rafale) deal. As stated by Mr Eric Trappier, the CEO of Dassault in an interview to the economic times, Dassault Aviation was keen to partner RIL and not HAL, as both were family enterprises and could work together. However, as the RFP had pre-specified that HAL would be the lead integrator, Dassault agreed to work with HAL. It however stated that it would help RIL create a Rs 1500 crore factory in Bangalore to produce wings for the Rafale jets to be made in India by HAL. 


All that remained to be done now was to sign the deal, but it fell through on extraneous grounds, 28 months after the announcement of Dassault Rafale being finalised. When the deal was put up to the Defence Minister for his seal of approval, he reportedly approved the deal but with a caveat that Dassault Aviation must take responsibility for the 108 Rafale MMRCA which HAL was to produce. This obviously was not acceptable to Dassault Aviation, as they could not take responsibility for the professionalism and expertise of another organisation. They also had reservations about the ability of HAL to accommodate the complex manufacturing and technology transfers of the aircraft. There were other issues too.  While Dassault had provisioned for 30 million man-hours for production of the 108 Rafale jets in India, HALs estimate was 2.7 times higher, escalating costs manifold. Why the then Defence Minister, Shri AK Antony reportedly made an observation on file that was designed to kill the deal remains a mystery. But the nations defence capability stood compromised to that extent.


In 2014, the BJP led NDA government was voted to power and Shri Narendra Modi was sworn in as the prime Minister. The IAF was still woefully short of fighter aircraft to fulfil its operational commitment and the Prime Minister was apprised of the same. Getting back to the original deal was not possible and a fresh deal would have come with all the attendant delays associated with the bidding process. There was an issue of operational urgency and the Prime Minister, during his visit to France, announced on 10 April 2015 that India would buy 36 Rafale jets in a fly away condition from Dassault Aviation, through a Government to Government (G to G) agreement. Being a G to G deal obviated all issues of impropriety which had characterised many earlier defence deals. Within a year, on 23 September 2016, the deal for 36 Rafale jets was signed between the two governments for a sum of €7.87 billion (Rs 59,000 crore approximately).


A comparison between the aborted deal of the UPA and the one executed by the NDA is odious as the former was not inked, and hence we do not know what price had been negotiated for the 126 Rafale MMRCA. The MoD had given an indication that the final value of the MMRCA deal would be in the range of Rs 791-987 crore per jet. However, this excluded about 50 to 60 unpriced items which were listed as miscellaneous in the winning bid by Dassault. Dassault’s bid only included the price of the initial 18 aircraft, licensing fees and the supply of parts required to assemble the remaining 108 in India. It excluded weapons, maintenance and the costs that HAL would incur for local assembly. The cost of Rs 1600 crore for a ready to fight aircraft, which includes the full complement of modern armaments, guidance systems and specific to India only add ons was thus a good deal to clinch, both in terms of cost and operational needs. It was also a bold decision taken by the Prime Minister in the national interest as against the sloth and lethargy that existed earlier on a matter as vital as national defence. As the first five Rafale fighter jets land in India on 29 July, the nation finally has one of the latest fighter jets which will greatly enhance the capability of the IAF, especially when all 36 jets are delivered.










 




 







Tuesday, July 28, 2020

IF IT AIN’T BROKE DON’T FIX IT


Response to those who want to change the Indian Army's regimental system


A lot of attention continues to be spawned at periodical intervals on the composition of the Indian Army, with subtle suggestions that the Army is casteist and racist in its origins—qualities not compatible with a modern Indian State. Such allegations can be dismissed off hand, but the manner in which such slurs continue to be cast, raises doubts on the motives of those trying to peddle a particular type of narrative.


Recently, Caravan magazine published an article on 01 March 2020, titled ‘Beneath the Uniform’—The casteist and racist origins of the Indian Army’s recruitment policies, authored by Sabyasachi Dasgupta, an Assistant Professor in Visva-Bharati University, Santiniketan. The author alleges that racist and casteist assumptions of the British era still continue to have a significant influence on the composition of the Indian Army and goes on to conclude; “while the India State is often hailed for its ‘unity in diversity,’ a look at the Army’s community based deployments indicates that the state might be harnessing the social divides to maintain its control”.


Individuals not well conversant with the military ethos often tend to make sweeping statements that are wide off the mark. A test of a military must be predicated on its stated role, which in the Indian context is to protect the nation from external aggression and internal disorder. This forms the very raison d’ĂȘtre of its existence. If shortcomings are found here, then most certainly questions need to be asked which could inter alia include all aspects of the functioning of a force, including its composition. If there are no shortcomings, then the motives of those raising frivolous issues must be placed on the scanner. So let us examine the performance of the Indian Army, since independence.


Soon after independence, the Indian Army found itself embroiled in a war in Jammu and Kashmir, to counter Pakistani aggression. In perhaps one of the most brilliant actions, troops were airlifted to Srinagar and the invaders were stopped in the nick of time on the outskirts of Srinagar, from where they were gradually pushed back till a ceasefire was accepted by the Indian government, bringing that war to an end. Since then, except for some minor changes to what was then called the Ceasefire Line and is now called the Line of Control, the status quo has been maintained. Pakistani aggression was again foiled in the 1965 war. Six years later, in the Liberation War, the nation achieved its biggest victory in millennia when the Pakistan Army in its eastern Wing surrendered and a new nation, Bangladesh was created in December 1971. Pakistan suffered a further humiliation in 1999, when it was forced to vacate its aggression on the Kargil heights.


It is true that the Indian Army suffered a setback in 1962, in its short border war with China, but that had little to do with the troops and was largely the consequence of political shenanigans, weak logistic infrastructure, poor equipment and inept political, bureaucratic and military leadership at the highest levels. It must be noted that it was the Indian Army which carried out the political integration of the country with swift actions in Junagadh (September 1947), Hyderabad (Operation Polo - September 1948), and the Liberation of Goa, Daman and Diu in December 1961. It is the Indian Army which has held the fabric of the nation together and quelled insurgencies in Northeast India, Punjab and Jammu and Kashmir, which is still an ongoing process in some areas. Obviously, if the Army has so effectively succeeded in its mandate of protecting the country from external aggression and internal disorder, then it is based on a sound organisational structure which has stood the test of time. Why then call for a change of such a system? Why is there a disquiet in some quarters, which would like to portray a negative narrative? Or are silent forces at work, deliberately trying to sow dissension within the rank and file of the Army for certain  ulterior motives?


In each and every deployment of the Indian Army since independence, either for conflict resolution or for any other purpose, the consideration has never been the caste or class composition of the unit. That is immaterial to the requirement of the task and to suggest otherwise denotes ignorance of the functioning ethos of the Army and indeed of the Armed Forces of India. To suggest that while dealing with internal security situations, the Army deploys troops which are from a different region or ethnicity is patently false. As an example, as part of its counter-terrorism effort in J&K, troops from all infantry regiments have been deployed since the last three decades. The same goes for quelling the insurgency in Punjab and in the Northeast. Whether troops are from the same area or from other areas, does not form part of the deployment philosophy of the military commanders. Hence, statements made that in cases of conflict and unrest, the Army deploys a regiment of a community from a different region or ethnicity to control the violence, pitting one people against the other, is patently false and malicious. On the contrary, in cases of internal disorder, the presence of the Army is welcomed by the people, as the public knows that the Army functions in a non-partisan manner. The deployment of troops is based on availability and location of the units and not on extraneous considerations such as the caste and class composition of the troops. In fact, such a thought is never even entertained.


The British Indian Army may or may not have had the concept of what is called the martial races. Post independence, however, within the military fraternity, no such concept existed. It is a well known fact in the Army that the performance of a unit is not based on the caste or class composition of its constituents, but on its leadership, training and morale. The concept of martial races, even if it was propagated by the British for their own purposes, was never a matter of consideration for enrolment of personnel in the Indian Army. So why did the Indian Army, post independence, continue with the British regimental system for its infantry? The answer is simple. The character and composition of the existing regiments was not changed, because fighting units thrive on tradition. Many units are centuries old, with a glorious past, evoking a sense of pride. In addition, the Infantry units at the time of Independence represented a cosmos of the Indian nation, as troops came from all parts of the country. There really was no sense in changing a system which had  worked so well in two World Wars, simply to appear to be ‘politically correct’. It is also worth noting that Infantry is the arm that closes in with the enemy in close combat. It requires a very high of level of cohesiveness, camaraderie and esprit de corps which takes years to build and to develop. That is why, when units go into battle, the prime motivation is the ‘izzat’ of the battalion, which makes men go beyond the call of duty for mission accomplishment. Unlike other professions, a nations armed forces are the final bastion. If the bastion falls, the nation falls and will slip into subjugation. Indian history for over a millennia is testimony to the fact that India was subjugated because it had lost the military edge to foreign invaders. 


But the above notwithstanding, recruitment to the army, post independence, was open to all citizens of India. Region wise recruitment however remained the norm, because it was administratively convenient. Getting together a host of people from a particular area and grouping them together for training and administrative needs, made a great deal of sense to both the military hierarchy as also to the troops concerned. Here, stress needs to be laid on the fact that recruitment did not discriminate based on caste. For example, recruitment in the Dogra Regiment was open to all residents of the geographical area of Himachal Pradesh, and parts of Punjab and J&K, regardless of their caste. Similarly, the same could be said for other Regiments of the Infantry such as Bihar, Punjab, Maratha, Madras, to name but a few. However, there were Infantry regiments like the Brigade of the Guards, where recruitment was from across the country as far as the regiment was concerned. But the units still had troops from a particular geographical area. As far as the logistic support units are concerned, which from a sizeable chunk of the Army, the recruitment base remained all India.


Regardless of the composition of units, the Army functions as one team. The Armed Forces are the only organisation in India, where caste, class or religion is not a factor. When units operate as part of a brigade or higher grouping, they are bound by the soldierly code of ‘nation first’. If one wishes to see a totally homogenous society, free of prejudice, then that can be witnessed in India’s Armed Forces. This culture is imbued in the ethos of the Armed Forces, which is why the nation trusts its men and women in uniform. 


The Armed Forces rightly rejected the call for reservations within the Forces, as recruitment to the Force is based on merit, with no consideration of class, caste or religious affiliation. Every person who enters the Force, does so on merit. Yes, the Army does have regiments, based on historical factors, such as the Sikh Light Infantry and the Mahar Regiment. But that does not exclude those who have been historically discriminated against, in joining other regiments also. For example, in the Dogra regiment, the recruitment base of troops is from a particular geographical area, but caste is not a consideration, which is why every caste is represented in the Regiment. The same goes for regiments like the Garhwal Rifles and others, which are also based on geographical contiguity and not on caste lines. The underlying principle for joining the Armed Forces remains constant; the ability to do the assigned task. Merit remains the sole criteria.


It has been claimed that the regimental system was created as a ploy by the British rulers to prevent any formidable coalition against them as occurred in the mutiny. However, geographical contiguity has been a guiding principle for recruitment by armies across the world as it makes for ease in administration. For a country as diverse as India, with its multiplicity of languages, customs and food habits, it makes far greater sense to group people on the basis of geographical contiguity. In the case of the Indian Army, the Regimental System has never been divisive. On the contrary, it has led to greater homogeneity at the unit level as also at the level of field formations where the wider intermingling with troops from other regions takes place. It is the strong military ethos and sense of nationalism that has kept the Indian Army free from the virus of caste, class and religious polarisation. Perhaps there is a lesson here, that could be imbibed by people all across the length and breadth of India.


Finally, many people continue to express concerns on what they perceive to be the unequal representation of India’s multi-faceted society in the officer cadre of the Armed Forces. This is perhaps the biggest canard that has been spread by people who are either misinformed or who have a purpose in spreading such misinformation. Selection to the officer cadre is open to all Indians, and is based on merit. Over a million people every year apply for a commission in India’s Armed Forces, but most are weeded out after the initial written tests conducted by the UPSC. This is then followed by a grinding process of going through the Services Selection Board and finally through a medical board. The merit list is prepared thereafter, and finally, on an annual basis, we have about 1500 officers selected for training. The entire process is very transparent and the sole criteria for selection is merit. The system has stood the test of time for its impartiality and each batch which is commissioned, is in a sense a reflection of the composite nature of India’s society. The officers of India’s Armed Forces are true leaders in every sense of the word, imbued with the code “The Safety, Honour and Welfare of your country, comes first, always and every time”. This selfless service goes beyond the narrow straitjacket of caste, class or religious differentiation, so common in other organisations. This is what has enabled India to win its many wars. This is what has kept the country united and as one entity.


Let us not then fiddle with a time tested system which has served the nation well, simply to pander to the ego of some self professed know alls, who unfortunately have never served in the Forces and have little knowledge of their functioning. It would be far better if such people devote their time and energy in creating a more homogenous society in the country, which remains riven and split on caste and communal lines. They could learn a thing or two from how the military conducts its affairs instead of trying to alter a system which has stood the test of time. The sage advice, “if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it,” must be heeded, especially in matters pertaining to India’s Armed Forces.


‘Beneath the Uniform’ - The casteist and racist origins of the Indian

Army’s recruitment policies

By Sabyasachi Dasgupta (assistant professor at the department of history at Visva-Bharati University, Santiniketan)

Published in Caravan Magazine - 1 March, 2020

THE PRESIDENT’S BODYGUARDa unit of the Indian Armyis considered

one of the most prestigious postings within the armed forces. In 2018, one Gaurav Yadav from Haryana’s Revari district filed a public-interest litigation in the Delhi High Court, alleging that the recruitment policy of the President’s Bodyguard discriminated by caste. The unit, as Yadav correctly pointed out, only recruits from three castesRajputs, Hindu Jats and Sikh Jats. According to Yadav, these three castes are being given “preferential treatment” to the detriment of other citizens of the country. A bench of the Delhi High Court, hearing the petition, asked the defence ministry and several senior army officials to file their counter affidavits on the issue by 9 May 2019.

Both the army and the government have exceeded the deadline, and are yet to file their responses.

This is not the first time the army’s recruitment policy has been challenged in

court. In 2012, IS Yadav, an Uttar Pradesh-based doctor, filed a petition in the Supreme Court, seeking an end to recruitment in the army on the basis of caste, region and religion.

“In the army alone there are caste, religion and region-based regiments such as the Jat Regiment, Sikh Regiment, Mahar Regiment, Gorkha Rifles, Garhwal Regiment, Dogra Regiment, etc,” Yadav’s petition said, “and hence recruitment to these regiments is primarily based on caste, region and religion.”

The petition also questioned the existence of two separate regiments for Sikhsone for Jat Sikhs, and a different one for Mazhabi and Ramdasia Sikhs,

who were formerly considered untouchables. The petitioner urged the court to end discrimination in recruitment to the army and to frame a new hiring policy

for the force.

In its response, the army said that it did not recruit on the basis of caste, region and religion, but it grouped recruits according to their communities for “administrative convenience” and “operational requirements.” The Supreme Court quashed the petition, saying that it did not want to “rock the army’s boat.”

The Indian Army’s own admission that caste-based stratification is necessary for “administrative convenience” gives a glimpse of the central role caste and identity play in the functioning of the force. In its organisation and composition,

the army still closely resembles the pre-Independence British Indian Army. The British concept of “martial races,” drawn from India’s own caste traditions, declared some communities “martial” and others incapable of fighting. This theorywith its racist and casteist assumptionscontinues to have a significant influence on the composition of the Indian Army. The history of the British Indian Army constitutes necessary context to understand the identity politics in India’s armed forces today.

THE BRITISH INDIAN ARMY was in reality three armies until 1895. Each of the Bengal, Madras and Bombay Presidencies had its own army, and each force had a different caste dynamic.

The Bengal army, set up by the East India Company in 1756, was dominated by upper castes. Its infantry units, besides a small number of Ahirs and Yadavs,

mostly recruited upper-caste Hindu peasants from modern-day eastern Uttar Pradesh and Bihar, referred to as Purbaiyas. Serving sepoys helped in recruitment, as they were encouraged to bring back potential recruits from among their relatives and friends.

Thus, the Bengal army functioned like an upper-caste club, where ties of clan and neighbourhood took centre stage and high-caste rhetoric was endemic. The sepoys claimed a certain amount of leeway in matters of religion. A high-caste

ethos pervaded the army and, in certain instances, sepoys refused the call of military duty if it conflicted with their religious beliefs. For example, sepoys

could refuse overseas service if it involved sea travel, which many dominant- caste Hindus believed would cause one to lose caste status. A culture of

conditional obedience evolved, where the high-caste sepoy was ready to render obedience as long his notions of religion and caste were not violated.

The dominance of upper-caste sepoys in the Bengal army was punctured somewhat by the induction of Gorkhas in the 1830s and Sikhs in the 1840s. Both communities were destined to play a central role in the post-1857 colonial armies. Nevertheless, high-caste domination continued to be a cardinal feature of the Bengal Army till 1857.

In contrast, the army of the Bombay presidency, despite the presence of a large

number of Purbaiyas, gave short shrift to religious or caste sentiments if they were used as a bargaining chip to evade military duty. One probable reason for the Purbaiyas’s inability to extract concessions from the Bombay army was that, unlike in the Bengal army, they did not constitute a brute majority there. The Bombay army had a diverse composition, and recruited from a large array of communities, including Dalits from the Mahar community. Mahars would play an important role in the battle of Bhima Koregaon in 1818, an event that has contemporary reverberations.

The lack of numbers was not the only reason for Purbaiyas’ diminished leverage in the Bombay army. The force’s policy differed significantly from that of the Bengal army. While its leaders professed respect for the caste sentiments of the sepoys, they were uncompromising in their belief that caste could not be

allowed to come in the way of military duties. All efforts of the Purbaiyas towards extracting some concessions in this respect were resisted firmly. The pre-Mutiny Bombay army was one of those rare colonial institutions where the dynamics of caste did not assume a domineering role. This policy of keeping caste beliefs at bay was reasonably successful. While nearly the entire Bengal force revolted in 1857, only five out of the 29 regiments of the Bombay army mutinied. Thus, while the Bombay army demanded unconditional obedience from the sepoy, the Bengal army settled for conditional obedience.

The Madras army adopted a middle ground. In the final decades of the eighteenth centuryafter an initial period of preferring dominant castes,

including Purbaiyas from the Bengal Presidencyit shifted its focus to recruiting from the middle and oppressed castes, apart from a large number of Muslims. This shift in policy was to avoid conflicts over caste notions. The policymakers of the Madras army also seemed sanguine over the prospects of successfully dealing with the religious sentiments of the Muslim recruits.

In 1806, a major mutiny, driven by dominant castes and Muslims, broke out in the Vellore cantonment. The sepoys were up in arms over an order calling for the strict implementation of a pre-existing regulation banning the wearing of

caste marks. Muslim soldiers, too, had been asked to shave off their mustaches and beards. Matters were further aggravated by the issuing of new turbans, which sepoys found to be too similar to the headgear worn by “half-caste” Portuguese drummers, whom the sepoys detested and looked down upon. The sepoys appealed to the authorities, arguing that nobody would marry their daughters or share food and water with them if the new headgear was adopted.

On 10 July that year, roughly two and a half thousand sepoys broke out in open revolt. The uprising was quelled, with the sepoys suffering heavy casualties. In the aftermath of the Vellore mutiny, discontent surfaced among native regiments in several stations, but any brewing rebellions were nipped in the bud. A potentially major uprising spread over south India, predating the revolt of 1857 by fifty years, fizzled out before it could assume ominous proportions. It is unclear whether the sepoys had the kind of civilian support that was later

witnessed in the 1857 revolt.

The sepoys had a partial victory as the order prohibiting the wearing of caste marks and whiskers on parade was rescinded. The controversial headgear was not issued. The Madras army henceforth concentrated on empowering the middle- and oppressed-caste sepoys. For instance, it awarded palanquin allowances to sepoys who performed gallantly on the battlefield. This privilege of riding a palanquin, which had been the reserve of the elite castes until then,

was a rare honour for oppressed-caste soldiers. Army service thus empowered oppressed castes, giving them a new, distinct identity. The strategy clearly

worked well, as the sepoys in the Madras army remained steadfastly loyal in 1857.

The 1857 revolt was mostly led by units of the Bengal army, which was nearly disintegrated after the conflict. Dynamics of caste and religion were among the multiple factors that spurred the revolt, arguably the greatest anti-colonial struggle of the nineteenth century, which in its initial phase posed a fundamental challenge to the continuance of British rule in India. The tide, however, gradually turned in favour of the British.

AFTER THEIR TRIUMPH, the British brought in fundamental changes in the army. Only a few regiments of the Bengal army were retained, as the British

went about changing the army’s composition. Their initial strategy was to use different castes and communities to balance each other, and to increase recruitment from areas that had been loyal, such as Punjab.

In the 1880s, a new recruitment policy was devised, which came to be known as the martial-race theory. Initially propounded by the British military commander Frederick Roberts, it stated that only a few select communities, such as the Gorkhas, Dogras, Pathans and PunjabisMuslim, Hindu or Sikh— and a few others in the subcontinent, were to be dubbed “martial castes,” capable of fighting bravely and effectively.

Proponents of the theory gave several reasons why some communities possessed martial qualities and others did not. The only point of agreement among them was that wheat-eating, less-literate peasants from the rural areas

made the best fighters. Some of the proponents of the martial-race theory ascribed martial qualities to advantageous genes, while others stressed ecological, environmental, historical and political factors. What often was not stated was that most “martial” communities had been loyal during the 1857 revolt. According to some historians, the theory appropriated the varna system, and articulated it in racial terms.

Roberts believed that long years of peace in the Madras Presidency had

enervated the Madras sepoy and made him unmartial. He also believed that those who live in colder areas proved to be better fighters. George MacMunn,

another British general, believed in the superiority of Aryans over Dravidians. He believed Aryans had enslaved the original inhabitants and deprived them of

the right to bear arms. Therefore, only communities of supposedly Aryan origin were capable of being martial. MacMunn also believed that the tenets of certain religions, such as Sikhism, made their adherents martial. Many similar beliefs remain alive in the modern Indian army.

Caste played a crucial role in the labelling of communities as martial or non- martial. The dominant-caste Purbaiyas, the original martial class of the colonial armies, were not labelled a martial race because of the near total revolt of the Purbaiyas of the Bengal army in 1857.

Many oppressed castes became the first casualties of the martial-race theory. As the scholar Stephen P Cohen wrote in his 1969 essay “The Untouchable Soldier: Caste, Politics and the Indian Army,” a view was formed that Dalits were by birth and varna “inherently unmilitary.” A series of articles written before Independence in The Pioneer argued: why bother to recruit the “dhobbattalions” if they could not be trusted against the formidable Pathans? Mahars were gradually phased out by the 1890s. Mazhabi Sikhs were also weeded out of the ranks around the same time. The Bhils and several tribes from Assam, many of whom had served loyally in 1857, suffered the same fate. It seemed that proponents of the martial-race theory did not believe the oppressed castes worthy of being martial races.

The First World War saw an incredible demand for manpower. The army

initially tried to meet the challenge by intensifying recruitment from the martial communities. When it failed to recruit enough men, the colonial government reluctantly turned to the communities dubbed non-martial for recruitment. The Mahar regiment was reinstated, as was the recruitment of Mazhabis. But both communities would be demobilised again after the conclusion of the war. Many other oppressed-caste soldiers, recruited during the war, suffered the same fate.

The army’s bias against non-martial communities was made clear by the fact

that their members were rarely posted at the frontlines, and often found

themselves serving in auxiliary branches. The fighting was left to the martial races.

History repeated itself during the Second World War. The enormity of the situation forced army recruiters to grudgingly turn towards non-martial communities. Mahars and Mazhabis were again recruited. The Mahars now had a powerful patron in BR Ambedkar, a member of a national defence board and a Mahar himself. Nevertheless, deep-seated bias ensured that the non-martial communities would not be posted at frontline areas. Units composed of non- martial recruits would invariably be classified as incapable of fighting well, though they were hardly given the chance of proving their mettle. However, this

time the oppressed-caste units were not demobilised after the war.

The post-independence Indian army claims that caste plays a minimal role in its functioning. An order passed in January 1949 by General KM Cariappa, then its commander-in-chief, stated that recruitment to the army would be open to all classes of Indians, irrespective of caste, creed, ethnicity, religion and so on.

However, the ethos of the martial-race theory continued to play a major role, and these races provide the bulk of the manpower to the army. Though most of the regiments raised after Independence have been mixed units, recruited on what the army calls an “All India” basis, the basic composition of the old single- class regiments has been left untouched, even though there have been alterations and additions to the strength of such regiments. The result is that a significant number of infantry regiments are still single-class or fixed-class

ones.

A single-class regiment recruits from one single community or caste. For example, the Sikh regiment is composed solely of Jat Sikhs, while the Sikh Light Infantry recruits solely from Mazhabi Sikhs. A fixed-class regiment recruits from more than one community, but only from certain specified classes. Each battalion of the Punjab regiment typically has two Jat Sikh and two Dogra companies. Similarly, each battlion of the Bihar regiment has two companies of Biharis and two companies of Adivasis recruited from Bihar, Jharkhand,

Chhattisgarh and Odisha.

The all-India regiments raised after Independence can have mixed recruitment and organisation. However, recruitment to these regiments is regional in

nature, to ensure that differences in food habits, language and so on are not overwhelmingly wide. These regiments recruit from a much wider pool and mix troops hailing from different communities. The most high-profile of these new all-India regiments are the Guards regiments, formed in 1949.

The military establishment after Independence has staunchly opposed dissolving caste-based regiments and ending heavy recruitment from martial races. It continues to do so in the ongoing case of Gaurav Yadav. Most of the top generals in the initial decades of Independence, such as Cariappa, KS Thimayya,

JN Chaudhuri and, later, Sam Manekshaw, were firm in their belief that no radical change should be effected in the recruitment policy of the Indian Army. They took a double-edged public positionon one hand, they said that caste- based regiments are needed for efficiency in fighting and argue that people from the same community fight better together; on the other, they claim that the army is now open to all classes, irrespective of caste, ethnicity and religion.

The civilian establishment, out of a desire to not rock the boat, has not interfered much in this strategy. It has, however, tried to diversify the officer corps, which seems more representative of the country’s diversity than the larger body of jawans. But certain groups and communities remain overrepresented among military officers. The civilian establishment has also been steadfast in shooting down any proposal to form new regiments on the

basis of caste or region.

Unlike during the colonial era, oppressed-caste recruits or existing regiments with predominantly oppressed-caste recruits have not been dubbed non- martial and shunted out in the post-Independence army. But the army has stood firm against any attempts to introduce caste-based reservations. When the former defence minister VK Krishna Menon asked Thimayya, who was then the army chief, why the army was not implementing reservations for Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes, Thimayya replied that the army was open to all

Indians irrespective of caste, creed and religion. Thimayya then argued that the

army’s recruitment policy is based “largely on time-tested traditions and kinship.” Despite his reputation for being stubborn, Menon dropped the matter.

For all its denials, the Indian Army does rely on religious and caste traditions to indoctrinate new recruits, particularly in single-class regiments. The new recruit in such regiments is not to merely undergo training in arms, he is also to imbibe the doctrines and the supposedly true traditions of his faith, for his martial qualities are seemingly linked to his religious ethos.

Matters came to a head again in the 1970s, when the then defence minister, Jagjivan Ram, again asked why the army was not implementing reservations in recruitment. Fuming at what he felt was a completely unwarranted, and

dangerous, intervention in army affairs, the army chief, Maneckshaw, asked his deputy adjutant general to reply that when reservations were introduced in the 1950s, a clause in the legislation said that they did not apply to the army.

The underlying logic behind Manekshaw and Thimayya’s refusal to entertain proposals for reservation was very clear. While time-tested regiments composed overwhelmingly of the oppressed castes were valued, and there was no bar to their recruitment in mixed regiments provided they met the required criteria, any provision that seemingly relaxed the norms for entry into the army would be firmly resisted.

Among the oldest critiques of the martial-race theory and single-class regiments came from Ambedkar. In a posthumously published manuscript, he

wrote:

The principle of organisation that was introduced in 1890 is known as the principle of class composition as against the old principle of a mixed regiment. Under the new principle, the Indian Army was organized on the principle of class regiment or the class squadron or company system. This means, in the first case, that the whole regiment is composed of one class (or caste) and in the second case, that every squadron or company is formed entirely of one class. The old principle of recruiting was to take the best men available, no matter

what his race or religion was. Under the new principle, race of the man became a more important factor than his physique or his intellect. For the purposes of

recruitment, the different castes and communities of India are divided into categories, those belonging to the martial races and those belonging to the non-

martial races. The non-martial races are excluded from military service. Only the castes and communities which are included in the category of martial races are drawn upon for feeding the Army.

Ambedkar wrote disapprovingly of single-class regiments. “The reasons which underlie the principle of class composition it is said, ‘are to a certain extent political, as tending to prevent any such formidable coalition’ against the British, as occurred in the Mutiny,” he wrote. “I should have thought that the old system of a mixed regiment was safer.”

Years later, in 1969, Stephen Cohen noted that unlike in the US military, where “caste-based (all-Negro) units were ideologically resented and militarily inefficient,” caste-based organisation finds general acceptance within India. Speculating on for how long such organisation will remain socially acceptable, he wrote, “They will probably remain so until general social disapproval of caste as an organising principle becomes significantly greater, or until a rapid rise in the technological sophistication of the army requires higher educational levels for recruits. Both developments seem unlikely in the next decade.”

Fifty years later, little has changed despite many challenges to caste-based recruitment over the years. The Indian Army continues to support sentiments of caste pride and loyalty, and finds them essential to operational efficiency. In cases of conflict and unrest, it would deploy a regiment of a community from a

different region or ethnicity to control the violence, pitting one people against the other, as the British once did. India is often hailed for its “unity in diversity,” but a look at such community-based deployments indicates that the state might be harnessing the social divides to maintain its control.

The Cabal Strikes!

The was posted on FB

There is a group of retired civil servants who function like a well oiled cabal. With typical sophistry and sleight of hand, they have now issued a statement under the banner of what they term themselves as—Yes hold your breath—CONSTITUTIONAL CONDUCT GROUP. Wow! Now what is the grouse of these Constitutional worthies? They are deeply concerned at the assault on the Rule of Law in India and on its citizens’ rights to free speech and dissent, as guaranteed by Article 19 of the Constitution.

There can be no two opinions that Article 19 of the Constitution must be preserved and protected. What is of concern however, is that this group is very selective in talking about Freedom Of Expression (FoE). They advocate FoE for all those groups that are hell bent on breaking India. But they maintain a very pregnant silence when people have been attacked for expressing their opinions, which did not suit their leftist, islamist, breaking India narrative.

So, who does this cabal support? As per their statement, they are upset about the arrest of eleven activists, including Kafeel Khan, Safoora Zargar, Akhil Gogoi and Sharjeel Imam. They feel that these defenders, many of them students, appear to have been arrested simply because they exercised their right to denounce and protest against the CAA (Citizenship Amendment Act), and their arrest seems clearly designed to send a chilling message to India’s vibrant civil society that criticism of government policies will not be tolerated. OK, so let us see who these four above named people are:

Kafeel Khan was the medical officer in charge of a Gorakhpur hospital, when 70 children died of encephalitis in 2017. He was suspended for negligence of duty. In 2020, this person took part in anti CAA protests and made some outrageous statements designed to stir up communal passion. He said in a speech that Amit Shah was converting muslims into second class citizens and called on the students to carry out violent protests, designed to create an atmosphere of fear and insecurity within the citizens of Aligarh.

Safoora Zargar was detained under the Unlawful Activities Prevention Act. She was denied bail by the Patiala House Court after the Court had come to the conclusion that there was a prima facie case prevalent against her for being a part of a “larger conspiracy” in creating violence and chaos during the North East Delhi riots. Later, she was given bail as she was five months pregnant.

Akhil Gogoi is under investigation by the NIA, looking into a terror angle behind the violent protests against the CAA across Assam in December 2019. Sharjeel Imam is the infamous person under investigation for sedition. In a speech at AMU, he advocated putting road blocks to cut off the chicken’s neck from India as part of anti-CAA and anti-NRC protests.

The cabal is also upset that some urban naxals have been arrested in the Bhima-Koregaon case. They refer to people like Sudha Bharadwaj, Shoma Sen, Gautam Navlakha and Anand Teltumbde as India’s finest social and human rights activists! Sudha Bharadwaj is a hard core leftist, facing charges in the Elgar Parishad-Maoist links case. Shoma Sen, Gautam Navlakha and Anand Teltumbde are charged under the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act (UAPA) with spreading controversial pamphlets and delivering hate speeches in connection with the Bhima Koregaon violence that broke out in January 2018.

The cabal is upset that Siddharth Varadarajan, founding Editor of The Wire, is facing criminal charges. This person is a US citizen of Indian descent, married to a hard core maoist, Nandini Sundar who is facing murder charges. They are shedding crocodile tears for the separatists who have been detained in J&K and for the suspension of mobile communications in the state for some time. They never shed a tear for the thousands killed by the terrorists and the supporters, nor for the genocide of the Hindus in Kashmir in 1990, but now that the situation is finally coming under control after 30 years of radical Islamic violence, they are deeply upset.

And their agenda gets exposed when they claim that Harsh Mander has been named in a charge sheet for a speech, which they claim called for peace. But the speech actually castigated the Apex Court and called for the people to take to the streets. They make mention of the speech by Kapil Mishra and Anurag Thakur, but are silent on the hate speech of Sonia Gandhi who asked the people to come out on the streets to fight or Rahul Gandhi who compared the Prime Minister to Godse!

It is sad that the cabal did not see it fit to mention the harassment which the Congress party caused to Mr Arnab Goswami, simply because he called Sonia Gandhi by her maiden name, Antonia Maino! Now that was an assault on FoE. But perhaps, the lady is above the law.

The cabal has names such as Shiv Shankar Menon, a former NSA and Shyam Saran, a former foreign Secretary as signatories. Is this the reason why our security establishments have been compromised over the years? Then there are the standard lot who have a typical ideological bent, which makes them blind to reality, like Aruna Roy, Julio Ribeiro, Najeeb Jung, KP Fabian and AS Dulat. And finally, the rest of the motley crowd is a lot of deadwood, who did nothing much while in government and now, are hell bent on being spoilers. India can do without them. Eventually, this lot will be relegated to the dustbin of history, as will their mentors, some of whom having sold their souls for a mess of pottage. Judas lives on.


STATEMENT OF THE CONSTITUTIONAL CONDUCT GROUP Assault on the Rule of Law and Article 19 of the Constitution of India

04 July 2020

This statement by our group of former civil servants arises from our deep concern at the assault on the Rule of Law in India and on its citizens’ rights to free speech and dissent, basic elements of any democracy. The whole constitutional edifice is dependent on the Rule of Law, which implies the subjection of all the organs and instrumentalities of the state to the law and the absence of arbitrary power. The rights to Freedom of Speech & Expression, Freedom of Assembly and the like, guaranteed by Article 19 of the Constitution, are a corrective to the plight of the poor and the disadvantaged across the axes of income, gender, religion, caste and community. To uphold the rule of law and enforce the rights to freedoms, the judiciary must be the vigilant sentinel guarding the values of constitutional propriety.

Scholars like Nobel Laureate Amartya Sen have established that the elimination of famine, a colonial legacy in India, came from the clamour of the media, the legislatures and the courts as also concerns of political parties seeking re-election. Public Interest Litigation has given voice to the suppressed on issues like bonded labour, child labour and the illiterate without work or food finding resonance in the corridors of power. Article 19 of the Constitution of India guaranteeing freedom of speech is the key in this struggle.

The rampant erosion of the rule of law in evidence today militates against the actualization of the freedom of speech which is the cornerstone of democratic functioning. The gulf between the Rule of Law rhetoric and reality is getting wider and wider. The police establishments across the country appear to have become proxies for the respective ruling parties. Independent experts like Special Rapporteurs and members of the Working Group on Arbitrary Detentions associated with the United Nations, in referring to the arrest of eleven activists, including Kafeel Khan, Safoora Zargar, Akhil Gogoi and Sharjeel Imam, say succinctly: “These defenders, many of them students, appear to have been arrested simplybecause they exercised their right to denounce and protest against the CAA (Citizenship Amendment Act), and their arrest seems clearly designed to send a chilling message to India’s vibrant civil society that criticism of government policies will not be tolerated.” Journalists like Gauri Lankesh, a free-spirited journalist writing in Kannada, have been murdered, shot in cold blood allegedly by right-wing groups.

According to the Press Freedom Index of Reporters without Borders, India stands at 142 out of 180 countries in 2020, falling 6 places since 2015. Flagrant misuse of draconian laws of sedition and the Unauthorized Activities (Prevention) Act (UAPA) has led to the arrest of journalists, intellectuals, university students, film-makers, human rights activists and popular figures who dared criticise the present regime. When, as happened in Karnataka, in consequence of a school play critical of the CAA a primary school teacher and the mother of a student are charged with sedition and two young children aged 9 and 10 are questioned by police over many days, this becomes a theatre of the absurd.

Any criticism of government is considered anti-national” and invites punitive wrath. The law of sedition, itself a colonial relic, is resorted to by a succession of governments, but its application has sharply increased. From 2016 to 2018, 332 persons were arrested under this

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law but only 7 convicted, exposing the absence of evidence and exercise of vendetta. The online portal Scroll.in reported that more than “10,000 Adivasis in Jharkhand have been accused of sedition and disturbing public order” in connection with the Pathalgadi movement.

In the case of UAPA, court proceedings drag on while detention continues. In the celebrated Bhima-Koregaon case several of India’s finest social and human rights activists like Sudha Bharadwaj, Shoma Sen and Gautam Navlakha and public intellectuals like Anand Teltumbde languish in prison under the malevolent label of “urban Maoists”, which consigns such exemplars of civic life to the reviled category of “anti-national”. Attacks on students of Jawaharlal Nehru University and Jamia Milia Islamia recently choked the rights of students and faculty to voice their criticism of the existing state of affairs, including the CAA.

The corona pandemic has been an excuse for curbing freedom of speech across States. A report of the Rights and Risks Analysis Group has it that 55 journalists were singled out for writing on the mishandling of the Covid situation: threats, FIRs, assaults and arrests were amongst the intimidatory tactics used. Though the largest number was in UP, such cases also took place in States with governments of different political parties. Dhaval Patel in Gujarat and Rahul Zori in Maharashtra, with FIRs filed against them, and Major Singh Panjabi being beaten up in Punjab by the police are examples. Earlier in the year, one Dr Indranil Khan in Kolkata was interrogated, threatened with arrest and had his phone and SIM card confiscated for commenting online of deficiencies in the supply of PPE to doctors and nurses working with corona patients. In a rare defence of the freedom of speech, the Kolkata High Court in his case said: Freedom of speech and expression which is granted under Article 19 of the Constitution of India has to be scrupulously upheld by the State. If an expression of opinion brings the government into disrepute, it cannot defend this allegation by intimidation of the person expressing the opinion by subjecting him to prolonged interrogation, threatening arrest, seizing his mobile phone and SIM card and so on.”

When Siddharth Varadarajan, founding Editor of The Wire, faced criminal charges for reporting that the UP Chief Minister attended a religious event after the lockdown was announcedmore than 4600 signatories protested, amongst them eminent academics, a retired Supreme Court Judge, a former National Security Adviser, a former Chief of Naval Staff and well-known persons connected with the arts. A medical emergency should not serve as the pretext for the imposition of a de facto political emergency” they wrote.

The detentions in Kashmir of hundreds of political activists and the suspension of communications for several months after the revocation of its special status is a blot on India’s democracy, with Kashmir described by the International Press Institute as amongst the “world’s most repressive spots for the press.” In many parts of India, Section 144 is imposed for extended periods of time to prohibit the assembly of people despite the Supreme Court ruling that such curbs be restricted to emergencies.

Finally, the investigations into the riots in north-east Delhi have betrayed an institutional bias against the minority community. Dr M.A. Anwar, the proprietor of Hind Hospital in New Mustafabadwhose prompt action in providing help to injured people during the targeted violence in North East Delhi in late February 2020 was praised by many, including the Delhi High Court, is now named in a charge-sheet filed in a murder case and for instigating local people against the government on the issue of CAA-NRC. The UAPA has been used against activists who opposed the CAA through peaceful protest. People like Harsh Mander

and Yogendra Yadav have been named in charge sheets even though they are not amongst the accused. Harsh Mander’s speech, which called for peace, was made in December, 2019, weeks before the outbreak of any violence. Yet there are rumours of his intended arrest which, were it to occur now, would make a travesty of the law. Meanwhile, Kapil Mishra and Anurag Thakur, BJP leader and Minister respectively, who had openly called for violence, widely projected in the media, which followed almost immediately thereafter, face no action.

All Indians must unite in defence of the Rule of Law and Article 19, the repository of the democratic right to freedom of speech and to dissent.

SATYAMEVA JAYATE
Constitutional Conduct Group (99 signatories as below)

  1. Anita Agnihotri

  2. Salahuddin Ahmad

  3. S.P. Ambrose

  4. Anand Arni

  5. G. Balachandhran

  6. Vappala Balachandran

  7. Gopalan Balagopal

  8. Chandrashekhar Balakrishnan

  9. Sharad Behar

  10. Aurobindo Behera

  11. Madhu Bhaduri

  12. Ravi Budhiraja

  13. Sundar Burra

  14. Rachel

    Chatterjee

  15. Kalyani

    Chaudhuri

  16. Anna Dani

  17. Surjit K. Das

  18. Vibha Puri Das

  19. P.R. Dasgupta

  20. Pradeep K. Deb

  21. Nitin Desai

  22. Keshav Desiraju

IAS (Retd.)

IAS (Retd.) IAS (Retd.)

R&AW (Retd.)
IAS (Retd.)

IPS (Retd.)

IAS (Retd.)

IAS (Retd.)

IAS (Retd.)

IAS (Retd.)

IFS (Retd.) IAS (Retd.)

IAS (Retd.) IAS (Retd.)

IAS (Retd.) IAS (Retd.)

IAS (Retd.) IAS (Retd.) IAS (Retd.) IAS (Retd.) IES (Retd.)

IAS (Retd.)

Former Secretary, Department of Social Justice Empowerment, GoI

Former Chief Secretary, Govt. of Rajasthan

Former Additional Secretary, Ministry of Shipping & Transport, GoI

Former Special Secretary, Cabinet Secretariat, GoI

Former Additional Chief Secretary, Govt. of West Bengal
Former Special Secretary, Cabinet Secretariat, GoI

Former Special Secretary, Govt. of West Bengal Former Secretary, Coal, GoI
Former Chief Secretary, Govt. of Madhya Pradesh Former Member, Board of Revenue, Govt. of Odisha

Former Ambassador to Portugal
Former Chairman, Jawaharlal Nehru Port Trust, GoI

Former Secretary, Govt. of Maharashtra
Former Special Chief Secretary, Agriculture, Govt. of Andhra Pradesh
Former Additional Chief Secretary, Govt. of West Bengal
Former Additional Chief Secretary, Govt. of Maharashtra
Former Chief Secretary, Govt. of Uttarakhand Former Secretary, Ministry of Tribal Affairs, GoI Former Chairman, Food Corporation of India, GoI Former Secretary, Deptt. Of Sports, GoI
Former Secretary and Chief Economic Adviser, Ministry of Finance, GoI

Former Health Secretary, GoI

  1. M.G. Devasahayam

  2. Sushil Dubey

  3. A.S. Dulat

  4. K.P. Fabian

  5. Prabhu Ghate

  6. Gourisankar Ghosh

  7. Suresh K. Goel

  8. S.K. Guha

  9. Meena Gupta

  10. Ravi Vira

    Gupta

  11. Wajahat

    Habibullah

  12. Deepa Hari

  13. Sajjad Hassan

  14. Siraj Hussain

  15. Kamal Jaswal

  16. Najeeb Jung

  17. Vinod C.

    Khanna

  18. Rahul Khullar

  19. K. John Koshy

  20. Ajai Kumar

  21. Brijesh Kumar

  22. Sudhir Kumar

  23. P.K. Lahiri

  24. Aloke B. Lal

  25. Subodh Lal

  26. Amitabh Mathur

  27. Lalit Mathur

  28. Aditi Mehta

  29. Dalip Mehta

  30. Shivshankar Menon

IAS

IFS IPS

IFS IAS

IAS IFS IAS IAS IAS IAS

(Retd.)

(Retd.) (Retd.)

(Retd.) (Retd.)

(Retd.) (Retd.) (Retd.)

(Retd.) (Retd.) (Retd.)

Former Secretary, Govt. of Haryana

Former Ambassador to Sweden
Former OSD on Kashmir, Prime Minister’s Office, GoI
Former Ambassador to Italy

Former Addl. Director General, Department of Tourism, GoI
Former Mission Director, National Drinking Water Mission, GoI

Former Director General, Indian Council of Cultural Relations, GoI
Former Joint Secretary, Department of Women & Child Development, GoI

Former Secretary, Ministry of Environment & Forests, GoI
Former Deputy Governor, Reserve Bank of India

Former Secretary, GoI and Chief Information Commissioner

Former Commissioner (Planning), Govt. of Manipur Former Secretary, Department of Agriculture, GoI

Former Secretary, Department of Information Technology, GoI

IRS (Resigned) IAS (Retd.)

IAS (Retd.) IAS (Retd.)

IAS (Retd.) IFS (Retd.)

IAS (Retd.) IAS (Retd.)

Indian Forest Service (Retd.)
IAS (Retd.)

IAS (Retd.) IAS (Retd.) IPS (Retd.)

IPoS (Resigned) IPS (Retd.)

IAS (Retd.)

IAS (Retd.) IFS (Retd.)

IFS (Retd.)

Former Former

Former India Former Bengal Former

Former
Technology, GoI
Former Member, Central Administrative Tribunal Former Executive Director, Asian Development Bank Former Director General (Prosecution), Govt. of Uttarakhand
Former Deputy Director General, Ministry of Communications, GoI
Former Director, Aviation Research Centre and Former Special Secretary, Cabinet Secretariat, GoI Former Director General, National Institute of Rural Development, GoI
Former Additional Chief Secretary, Govt. of Rajasthan Former Secretary to GoI & Dean, Foreign Service Institute
Former Foreign Secretary and Former National Security Adviser

Lieutenant Governor, Delhi Additional Secretary, MEA, GoI

Chairman, Telecom Regulatory Authority of State Chief Information Commissioner, West Director, Ministry of Agriculture, GoI

Secretary, Department of Information

  1. Sonalini Mirchandani

  2. Sunil Mitra

  3. Avinash

    Mohananey

  4. Deb Mukharji

  5. Shiv Shankar Mukherjee

  6. Pranab S. Mukhopadhyay

  7. Nagalsamy

  8. Sobha Nambisan

  9. P.G.J. Nampoothiri

  10. Amitabha Pande

  11. Mira Pande

  12. Niranjan Pant

  13. Alok Perti

  14. R.

    Poornalingam

  15. R.M.

    Premkumar

  16. T.R.

    Raghunandan

  17. N.K.

    Raghupathy

  18. V.P. Raja

  19. C. Babu Rajeev

  20. K. Sujatha Rao

  21. Vijaya Latha

    Reddy

  22. Julio Ribeiro

  23. Aruna Roy

  24. Manabendra N. Roy

  25. Deepak Sanan

  26. G. Sankaran

  27. Shyam Saran

  28. S. Satyabhama

  29. N.C. Saxena

  30. Ardhendu Sen

IFS (Resigned) IAS (Retd.) IPS (Retd.)

IFS (Retd.) IFS (Retd.) IAS (Retd.)

IA&AS (Retd.)
IAS (Retd.)

IPS (Retd.)

IAS (Retd.)

IAS (Retd.) IA&AS (Retd.)

GoI

Former Secretary, Ministry of Finance, GoI
Former Director General of Police, Govt. of Sikkim

Former High Commissioner to Bangladesh and former Ambassador to Nepal
Former High Commissioner to the United Kingdom

Former Director, Institute of Port Management, GoI

Former Principal Accountant General, Tamil Nadu & Kerala
Former Principal Secretary (Planning), Govt. of Karnataka

Former Director General of Police, Govt. of Gujarat Former Secretary, Inter-State Council, GoI

Former State Election Commissioner, West Bengal Former Deputy Comptroller and Auditor General, GoI

Former Secretary, Ministry of Coal, GoI Former Secretary, Ministry of Textiles, GoI

Former Chief Secretary, Govt. of Maharashtra

Former Joint Secretary, Ministry of Panchayati Raj, GoI
Former Chairman, Staff Selection Commission, GoI

Former Chairman, Maharashtra Electricity Regulatory Commission
Former Secretary, GoI
Former Health Secretary, GoI

Former Deputy National Security Adviser, GoI

Former Adviser to Governor of Punjab & former Ambassador to Romania

Former Additional Chief Secretary, Govt. of West Bengal
Former Principal Adviser (AR) to Chief Minister, Govt. of Himachal Pradesh

Former President, Customs, Excise and Gold (Control) Appellate Tribunal

Former Foreign Secretary and Former Chairman, National Security Advisory Board
Former Chairperson, National Seeds Corporation, GoI

Former Secretary, Planning Commission, GoI Former Chief Secretary, Govt. of West Bengal

IAS IAS

IAS

IAS

IAS

IAS

IAS IAS IFS

IPS

(Retd.) (Retd.)

(Retd.)

(Retd.)

(Retd.)

(Retd.)

(Retd.) (Retd.) (Retd.)

(Retd.)

IAS (Resigned) IAS (Retd.)

IAS (Retd.)

IC&CES (Retd.)

IFS (Retd.)

IAS (Retd.) IAS (Retd.) IAS (Retd.)

  1. Abhijit Sengupta

  2. Aftab Seth

  3. Ashok Kumar

    Sharma

  4. Navrekha

    Sharma

  5. Raju Sharma

  6. K.S. Sidhu

  7. Padamvir Singh

  8. Sujatha Singh

  9. Tirlochan Singh

  10. Jawhar Sircar

  11. Narendra Sisodia

  12. Thanksy Thekkekera

  13. P.S.S. Thomas

  14. Geetha Thoopal

  15. Hindal Tyabji

  16. Ashok Vajpeyi

  17. Ramani

    Venkatesan

IAS (Retd.)

IFS (Retd.) IFS (Retd.)

IFS (Retd.) IAS (Retd.)

IAS (Retd.) IAS (Retd.) IFS (Retd.) IAS (Retd.)

IAS (Retd.)

IAS (Retd.)

IAS (Retd.)

IAS (Retd.)

IRAS (Retd.) IAS (Retd.)

IAS (Retd.) IAS (Retd.)

Former Secretary, Ministry of Culture, GoI

Former Ambassador to Japan
Former Ambassador to Finland and Estonia

Former Ambassador to Indonesia

Former Member, Board of Revenue, Govt. of Uttar Pradesh
Former Principal Secretary, Govt. of Maharashtra Former Director, LBSNAA, Mussoorie, GoI Former Foreign Secretary, GoI

Former Secretary, National Commission for Minorities, GoI
Former Secretary, Ministry of Culture, GoI, & former CEO, Prasar Bharati
Former Secretary, Ministry of Finance, GoI

Former Additional Chief Secretary, Minorities Development, Govt. of Maharashtra
Former Secretary General, National Human Rights Commission

Former General Manager, Metro Railway, Kolkata Former Chief Secretary rank, Govt. of Jammu & Kashmir
Former Chairman, Lalit Kala Akademi

Former Director General, YASHADA, Govt. of Maharashtra