Tuesday, June 16, 2015
THE SOLDIER'S RIGHT - WHY THE ARGUMENTS AGAINST THE ONE RANK ONE PENSION ARE MISLEADING - By Nalin Mehta
Jun 16 2015 : The Times of India (Hyderabad)
This is a facile question because unlike bureaucrats and paramilitary forces who all serve till 60 years of age, most military soldiers retire at 35-37 years of age, while officers below brigadier-or-equivalent do so at 54. The nation retires soldiers early to keep the army fit and young. They must be compensated adequately.
Roman emperor Augustus
started the tradition of military pensions in 13 BC by guaranteeing life
pensions to every legionary who fought 20 years for Rome. It set the bar for
all modern armies and independent India continued the British tradition of
financially privileging military service until 1973, when soldiers were paid
more than civilian bureaucrats.


That changed with the Third
Pay Commission, which brought military salaries in line with civil services. It
set us down the road to the current fight over one-rank-one-pension (OROP) by
military veterans.
With ex-soldiers going on
relay hunger strikes in over 50 towns, putting up posters across cities with
the A R Rahman-Rockstar catchline `sadda haq aithe rakh' [put our right here],
circulating internet memes showing soldiers turning into skeletons as they wait
for their dues, and at least one former army vice-chief writing publicly to
veterans to pose a “viable and potent threat of sabotaging the aspirations of
BJP“ in upcoming Bihar elections, OROP has become a political hot potato.
Yet, listening to the
agitators it is hard to avoid the conclusion that the fight for equal pensions
is at its heart a proxy battle for what soldiers see as restoring their lost
`izzat', for getting what they see as their rightful place in the
civil-military balance where political control of the military has translated
into bureaucratic control.
The biggest argument
against OROP the notion that every pension-eligible soldier who retires in a
particular rank should get the same pension irrespective of when he retired
is: What happens if other uniformed services like BSF, CRPF and so on also
demand the same right?
This is a facile question because unlike bureaucrats and paramilitary forces who all serve till 60 years of age, most military soldiers retire at 35-37 years of age, while officers below brigadier-or-equivalent do so at 54. The nation retires soldiers early to keep the army fit and young. They must be compensated adequately.
Secondly, the Sixth Pay
Commission granted what bureaucrats call “nonfunctional upgrade“(NFU) to
officers in all-India Group A services.This is a sort of ’pay-romotion' allowing
them to draw higher pay than their rank under certain conditions. Almost all
civil servants benefit from this while defence services officers do not. As
lawyer Navdeep Singh points out, NFU is a sort of “OROP by backdoor for civil
servants“.
Third, for some
unfathomable reason, serious disparities seem to have crept into other field
allowances. For example, army special forces soldiers get an extra Rs 800-1,200
per month as allowance, while Cobra commandos of the paramilitary forces earn
an extra Rs 7,200-11,000 per month.
Fourth, compared to the
bureaucracy, police and paramilitary, defence forces keep their career pyramid
much steeper to ensure professional standards. Only 0.8% of defence officers
make it to the rank of major general after 28 years of service, compared to a
much higher rate of civil servants who are eligible to become joint
secretaries, an equivalent rank, at 19 years of service.
Fifth, other democracies
privilege their soldiers better. In salaries and special allowances American
soldiers have a 15-20% edge over other government employees, British 10%,
Japanese 12-29% and French soldiers 15%. In pensions, while Indian soldiers get
50% of their last pay per month, American soldiers get 50-75%, Australian 76.5%,
Japanese 70% and French soldiers 75%.
The UK has embraced
one-rank-onepension for soldiers. Our two biggest strategic challenges,
Pakistan and China, have of course always privileged their military . This is
why the Supreme Court on 9 September 2009, parliamentary standing committee on
defence in May 2010, and Rajya Sabha committee on petitions on 19 December 2011
all backed the OROP demand.
The question is how much it
will cost? This is where soldiers allege bureaucratic games. In 2011, the
defence ministry told a parliamentary committee that annual costs would be Rs
3,000 crore while the finance ministry calculated a figure of Rs 1,300 crore.
In 2014, the defence ministry's controller general of defence accounts
reportedly estimated Rs 9,300 crore and current reports point to a figure
closer to Rs 8,000 crore.
Whatever the final number,
it is much more than the Rs 1,000 crore that finance minister Arun Jaitley
allocated to OROP in his 2014-15 budget. Even so, for a country with an annual
defence budget of Rs 2,20,000 crore and which relies so much on its soldiers,
we should be willing to bear this.
The longer the fight drags
on, the longer India's soldiers feel unappreciated.Nehruvian India, fearful of
military coups which engulfed every other post-colonial democracy from Asia to
Africa, gradually reduced the place of soldiers in the administrative hierarchy
in orders of precedence and pay. The time has come to go beyond patriotic
slogans and meaningless jingoistic saluting and reset the civilmilitary balance,
restoring the military its rightful place in a confident democracy.
With military veterans
asking “where are acche din for us“, returning their medals and sitting on
relay-hunger strikes, the prime minister must heed to Chanakya, the architect
of the first pan-Indian empire, who is said to have advised Chandragupta
Maurya: “The day a soldier has to demand his dues will be a sad day for
Magadha. From then on you have lost all moral sanction to be king.“
(Source- TOI)