OROP - It's the worrying issue not only for the Defense pensioners, but equally for the Central Pensioners too.
The latest news is that .......
Ex-Servicemen decide to Protest as One Rank One Pension talks with Defence Minister failed – Rally followed by Hunger Strike from 14.06.2015.
What is the fuss about OROP ?
Public cost involved for implementation
of OROP
DELIBERATE
NEGLECT OF VETERANS
LAST WORD ...
The latest news is that .......
Ex-Servicemen decide to Protest as One Rank One Pension talks with Defence Minister failed – Rally followed by Hunger Strike from 14.06.2015.
Quoted below is an article by Major General S.G. Vombatkere, VSM, retired in 1996 as Additional DG Discipline & Vigilance in Army HQ AG’s Branch. He holds a PhD degree in Structural Dynamics from I.I.T, Madras. He is Adjunct Associate Professor of the University of Iowa, USA, in international studies. With over 400 published papers in national and international journals and seminars, his current area of interest is strategic and development-related issues. E-mail:sg9kere@live.com)
Courtesy: ex-servicemenwelfare.blogspot.in/
Short history of One Rank One Pension
The demand for One-Rank-One-Pension (OROP) dates back to the
1980s. Nothing much happened until the Congress promised OROP in its poll
manifesto in 2004, but the UPA government rejected the OROP demand in December
2008, resulting in Veterans returning over 22,000 gallantry, war and service
medals to the President of India along with symbolically signing a letter with
their own blood in 2009. Under the Indian Ex-Servicemen’s Movement (IESM)
banner, Veterans have been taking delegations to the Ministry of Defence,
writing letters to the Prime Minister and Defence Minister, and holding
peaceful and dignified rallies and public demonstrations.
With continuing pressure from MP Shri Rajeev Chandrashekhar and
IESM, the the Parliament Standing Committee on Defence studied and accepted the
concept and definition of OROP in 2013. OROP was featured in the UPA
government’s budget in February 2014 and was reflected in an executive order to
that effect in the same month. After the BJP-NDA government came to power,
granting OROP was mentioned in the budget speech in July 2014, and the MoS for
Defence confirmed it in the Rajya Sabha in December 2014.
During the campaign for the 2014 general elections, BJP PM
candidate, Shri Narendra Modi, made a promise at a Veterans’ Rally in Rewari,
Haryana that, if elected to office, he would ensure OROP. In March 2015, during
PM Modi’s much-hyped visit to the troops on Siachen glacier, he volunteered the
statement that the OROP demand would be fulfilled. However, even after two
successive governments have agreed to OROP, and the PM’s promises on its
implementation, Veterans see OROP as a distant and receding light at the end of
a tunnel.
What is the fuss about OROP ?
But first, what is OROP? OROP simply means “uniform pension for
military personnel retiring in the same rank with the same length of service
irrespective of their date of retirement, and any future enhancement in the
rates of pension be automatically passed on to past pensioners”.
The reason for demanding OROP is that Veterans who have retired
earlier receive much less pension than those who retired more recently. It can
be argued that this also happens in other government jobs, so why are Veterans
making such a fuss? To answer this perfectly valid question one needs to know
some little-known facts concerning the military, at least insofar as service,
retirement and pension are concerned.
One, Armed Forces (AF) personnel are compulsorily retired at a
very early age, and retirement age depends upon their rank. Early retirement is
necessary to “keep the army young” because older men cannot fight battles which
make huge demands on stamina and strength. Soldiers (Sepoys, or in general,
Jawans) who have not been promoted to NCO or JCO rank retire compulsorily after
just 15 to 17 years of service, when their age is 35 to 37 years. Sepoys who
are promoted as NCOs or JCOs retire at age 45 to 47 years. Officers compulsory
retirement age is connected with rank as follows – Major-50, Lt Col-52, Col-54,
Brig-56, Maj Gen-58, Lt Gen-60, General-62, noting that promotions depend both
on performance and severely limited vacancies due to the rigid pyramidal rank
structure. That is why, of all AF retirees, soldiers constitute about 90%.
Two, a soldier who was retired, say, in 1986 would receive
pension on the basis of his salary according to the Fourth Pay Commission,
while the pension of a soldier who was retired after the Sixth Pay Commission
(20 years later) would be considerably higher because successive Pay Commissions
fix salaries according to the rising cost indices. Thus, a Havildar (NCO) who
retired earlier with over 20 years of service may receive less pension than a
soldier who retired later with only 15 years of service. As an example for the
officer cadre, the pension of a post-2012 retiree Colonel was Rs.35,841,
whereas a pre-2006 retiree Major General’s pension was Rs.26,700. These
disparities are grossly unfair because the soldier is retired compulsorily at
an age depending upon his rank, and his pension is fixed upon the pay according
to the CPC in force at retirement.
Three, compulsory retirement after just 15-17 years of service
at age 35 years means that the soldier is effectively denied salary earnings of
25 years which other government employees (including the police forces) receive
because they retire at age 60 years. There is negligible scope for lateral
entry into government service even for soldiers who retire without disability
attributable to military service. He is forced to seek employment to supplement
his meagre pension at a time when his family and other commitments are just
beginning to increase. This, along with lower pension of earlier retirees is a
combination which makes for near-destitution of a soldier who served in hard
conditions to defend the nation. For comparison, a CRPF policeman retires at 57
years age, and CRPF authorities are pressing for the retirement age to be
increased to 60 years.
Four, there are huge differences in the military officer cadre
vis-a-vis IAS and IPS. Consider the rank of Maj Gen, to which only 0.8% of
officers get promoted because of the command-control-discipline rank structure
of the army, after about 30 years of service. But the equivalent rank (in terms
of salary) in the IAS is Joint Secretary (JS), which 100% of IAS cadre attain
after only about 18 years of service, and about 80% of IPS cadre after about 20
years. It is this unfairness in parity in addition to early retirement age
which is at the root of the OROP demand. Further, and even more unfairly, the Jawan
is equated with a Class D government employee.
Public cost involved for implementation
of OROP
There has been much discussion regarding what OROP would cost
the exchequer. Many opined it was unaffordable, and further that other
government servants would also demand OROP if granted to Veterans. However
Veterans maintain that OROP cannot be withheld from them because some others,
whose conditions of service and promotions are entirely different, also demand
OROP.
MoD sent the final proposal to implement OROP for Rs.8,300
crores to Ministry of Finance on 17 February 2015. Adding Rs.8,300 crores to
Rs.43,000 crores of Defence pensions, the total is Rs.51,300 crores per annum.
Veterans argue that when the BJP-NDA budget allowed Rs.5.72 lakh crores as
“revenue foregone” to provide concessions on corporate tax, commercial tax
& customs duties to business houses for just one year, hesitating at
spending less than one-tenth of it on Veterans who have given the best years of
their lives for the nation’s defence was a deliberate slight.
DELIBERATE
NEGLECT OF VETERANS
There was no member in 6CPC and earlier CPCs to represent
soldiers, who form not merely the single largest segment affected by the
decisions of 6CPC, but also form the only segment that is denied fundamental
freedoms under Articles 19(a) and 19(c), and have conditions of service,
promotion and retirement that are adverse when compared with other categories
under consideration of the 6CPC.
The Department of Ex-servicemen Welfare (DESW) was set up in
2004 within MoD, to formulate policies and programmes for the welfare and
resettlement of Veterans. However, without a single serving soldier or Veteran
in its setup, it has actually been working at cross purposes with Veterans’
welfare. Factually and outrageously, as a matter of policy DESW contested all
cases won by individual Veterans in courts of law, including one case
concerning a paltry Rs.702 per month won by a disabled soldier after litigating
in a High Court.
LAST WORD ...
A large section of the public including legislators, are
ignorant of soldiers’ working conditions – early retirement, non-family
stations and long separations, continual life-threatening stressful situations,
risks on-the-ground and in-the-field, high casualty rate, strict disciplinary
regime under military law, denial of fundamental rights, etc. The tragedy is
that they are not even interested in knowing, let alone understanding.
After promises have remained unimplemented, very recently PM
Modi made a statement that OROP was not clearly defined. This raised doubts
among Veterans regarding which vested interest has sown this “doubt” in the
PM’s mind, though most believe that these are IAS-sourced machinations. This
belief is supported in large measure by the composition and conduct of
successive CPCs and the attitude and manner of functioning of the Department of
Ex-Servicemen’s Welfare (DESW) under MoD, outlined earlier.
Veterans hold Mr. Modi accountable to promises made as PM-candidate
and later as PM. Sensing the growing disappointment and anger among Veterans,
the PM is reported to have tweeted that Veterans have waited 40 years and
should not mind waiting a little more to solve the OROP muddle. IESM has
demanded that government commit a definite date by which OROP would be
implemented, failing which a peaceful, dignified Maha-Rally would be held on
Sunday 14 June 2015 at Jantar Mantar, New Delhi, with simultaneous rallies in
some state capitals and other cities with a large Veterans’ presence. This is
to be followed by an indefinite relay fast starting 15 June.
Government’s continued neglect of veterans is actually a double
whammy on the country. On the one hand, valuable trained manpower is being
lost, and on the other hand impecunious soldiers are joining the ranks of the
unemployed or under-employed and exacerbating the current high levels of
country-wide discontent.
It does not take a rocket scientist to understand that OROP is a
matter of simple justice. Some Veterans say that governments playing with their
patience at the behest of vested interests that delay or deny OROP, are
figuratively playing with a bomb with a slow-burning fuse. Only time will tell
whether the Maha-Rally will result in grant of OROP, or whether the vested
interests succeed in destroying the bond between the soldier-veteran on the one
hand and the government on the other.
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