As
disturbing as the sight of protesting retired soldiers is the murky
bureaucrates of the military pension system. This invariably leads to the
question: what really is the Orop agitation all about?
Simply
put, Orop means that anyone superannuating from the armed forces will receive
the same pension as a person of similar rank and length of service, no matter
when they retire. Moreover, every time pension rates are enhanced, the increase
will automatically be passed on to all pensioners new and old.
This
scheme was put into effect in February 2016 and since then more than two
million military pensioners and their widows have received enhanced pensions,
which are reported to have cost the exchequer more than Rs 5,500 crores. About
one lakh more pensioners, many of them old and with lost records, are yet to
receive pension benefits.
However,
a section of retired armed forces officers has rejected the government’s Orop
scheme and resumed their agitation. One outcome of this was the recent tragic
suicide of an ex-serviceman.
The
Orop agitation now has spiralled into a full-blown political war with the
Opposition targeting the government for not fulfilling its pledge to the armed
forces.
Instead
of easing heightened emotions, the government has blundered by making
insensitive statements and trying to run down the agitation as an
Opposition-sponsored one.
The
defence minister, far from assuaging the Orop agitators, has hardened his
position by claiming that the vast majority of servicemen support the
government’s implementation of Orop.
This
points to a failure to connect with the military. Reports suggest that the
continued agitation is causing confusion and concern within the military ranks
as the reward of a lifetime pension is primarily what attracts recruits.
A
significant section of retired service officers, it must be noted, do not
support the current agitation or the manner in which it is being conducted.
They point out that in every negotiation there must be some give and take and
no one party should expect 100 per cent satisfaction. They maintain that unlike
past governments, the Narendra Modi government has fulfilled 90 per cent of the
Orop demands and that hundreds of thousands of ex-servicemen and military
widows have benefited from the increased rollout of pensions.
These
officers believe that their agitating co-officers should acknowledge the fact
that the reasons behind the government’s inability to meet every demand is due
to fiscal constraints and not an anti-military mindset.
They
also argue that military officers today cannot be considered impecunious by any
means. Pensions today are generous by most standards and retired personnel
enjoy free medical benefits, subsidised canteen and other facilities, which
civilians do not. All this, say the proponents of the Orop agitation, is beside
the point.
They
claim what the present government has implemented is a watered-down version of
Orop. The agitators among other things want pensions to be revised every year
instead of every two years (compared to every 10 years earlier) and oppose the
exclusion of Orop for personnel who opt for premature retirement.
The
military, being a highly pyramidical organisation, compulsorily retires almost
90 per cent of its personnel before they are 40 years old. A great percentage
of the older ones who remain do not have promotion prospects and many of them
seek premature retirement. For thousands of such officers, pension remains a
prime concern.
However,
the Orop agitation is not so much a matter of detail, of how much the
government has given or not given, whether the Orop idea has been implemented
in spirit or, as civilian bureaucrats maintain, an issue reflective of the
insatiable greed of a group of service personnel.
The
problem is the bureaucracy and its blatant machinations since 1973 when the
Third Pay Commission gave the first body blow to the military. Both pensions
and salaries of the military were slashed while those of the civil services
hiked. The latest pay commission continues along the same lines and has been
rejected by the service chiefs.
Since
then there has been a growing feeling in the military, particularly the Army,
that their status and emoluments relative to the civil bureaucracy have
deliberately and systematically been eroded.
This
feeling finally snowballed into the full-fledged agitation in 2009 with senior
retired officers coming out in the streets. This was an agitation without
parallel and its continuance remains a great source of worry for ordinary
citizens.
Ironically,
issues that are only tangentially connected to Orop are currently agitating
ex-servicemen and giving a fillip to Orop agitators.
The
two specific issues of great emotive value for the military are disability
pension and its status vis-à-vis the civil bureaucracy.
On
October 18, 2016, a joint secretary in the ministry of defence reportedly
issued a circular according to which all senior officers were downgraded
against their civilian counterparts. Thus, a major general who was earlier
equivalent to a joint director was downgraded to a principal director, a
colonel to a joint director from director and so on.
Some
years earlier, Pranab Mukherjee had suggested upgrading the status of military
officers as compared to their civilian counterparts, but the bureaucracy
ensured the opposite happened.
The
defence minister was told by his bureaucrats that nothing had changed and that
the reports of the downgrading of ranks were false. The minister believed them.
What
made matters worse was that the administrative diktats downgrading the military
coincided with the “surgical strikes” carried out by the Army in
Pakistan-occupied Kashmir. This was tantamount to waving a red rag before an
already unsettled military.
Similarly,
disability pensions were slashed on the very day of the surgical strikes,
causing huge resentment in the military. A military life is inherently
dangerous and injuries leading to disabilities can destroy a soldier’s life.
Unlike
civilian employees, thousands of soldiers get booted out of the military
prematurely if they fall short of medical requirements. A disability pension is
the only way to compensate these unfortunate men who have lost out.
Yet,
a bureaucratic order on September 29 this year introduced a “slab system” for
disability pension under which an officer would get a flat rate of Rs 27,000
per month, a junior commissioned officer Rs 17,000 and all other ranks Rs 12,000.
This effectively lowered actual payments made under the earlier percentage
system where disability pension was calculated as a percentage of last pay
drawn.
Mischievous
bureaucrats increasingly pose a grave threat to national integrity. They thrive
in a system that allows too much power in their hands and remain unaccountable
to all except their minister. If the minister can be “managed”, the bureaucrats
can get away with anything.
Today
the entire Orop controversy is quintessentially a battle between a section of
the military and the civil bureaucracy. To make matters worse this fight has
escalated into a full-scale political one, and will stay that way.
It
will require great statesmanship to rid the military community of its
collective angst and steer the military establishment away from the brink.
Sadly, given the current political climate, it seems unlikely anything like
that will happen.
(SOURCE : DECCAN CHRONICLE)
Few facts are indisputable- Neta Babu nexus has definitely harmed the Forces, to gain themselves. Modi stands apart but is far short of what should be.Forces have never, since independence reposed as much faith in any leader as they have in Modi ji.The disappointment is huge and growing. Times change, Govts come and go, that won't change for present regime, but the Armed Forces will be right there. Injustice can't be permanent, now the awakening has come in the Forces and can't be wished away.Better late than never,cheating is cheating (by babus and AJ), bravado is bravado (by the DM), no body is fooled permanently nor is going to take it for too long.The present state of relations is damaging to the nation but whose nation is it any way. Hopefully, wisdom dawns on the powers that be in good time, the nation shouldn't have to pay a price.
ReplyDeleteIts time we realise and have courage to say that its the failure of political leadership.
ReplyDeleteWhoever may in background or adding fuel .. but need of hour is to recognise the real sinners.
Even the brothers among us on jointing this political system have graduated to become same scoundrels and cheats.
leave all these ghissi pltti matters. majority of jcos veterans who had put full service terms didnt get any orop (indeed paan masala expense)
ReplyDeleteand DL 33( sub zero). so letus have 7cpc first benefits first and later think the orop which is an infant thoda bada honedo.