The defence services feel that the
pay commission has erred in comparing defence expenditure on salaries with
expenditure on operation and maintenance by the armed forces.
In a rare move, the three service
chiefs — Army Chief General Dalbir Singh, Air Chief Marshal Arup Raha and Navy
Chief Admiral Robin Dhowan — have sent a joint memorandum to Defence Minister
Manohar Parrikar expressing concern about the Seventh Pay Commission’s
recommendations. They have sought an expert committee, with representatives
from the armed forces, to redress the grievances identified by the defence
services.
Defence ministry sources said
Parrikar has already had an informal interaction with the three service chiefs,
and a detailed presentation on all the issues raised in the joint memorandum will
be held this week.
The memorandum, sent last week,
follows another complaint made by the armed forces to the defence ministry last
month on military personnel who seek premature retirement being excluded from
the ambit of One Rank One Pension (OROP) scheme.
The pay commission cells of the three
defence services have listed some common grievances after a detailed study of
the 900-page report. Members of these cells said that prima facie, the report
has used incorrect and irrelevant data, leading to wrong analysis and skewed
interpretation.
They claimed that almost all
proposals submitted to the pay commission through a joint services memorandum
have been rejected without providing any justification, or without even
mentioning them. They pointed out that the pay commission, on the other hand,
has mentioned the proposals of all other categories of central government
services, analysing and commenting on each of them in detail.
“The Seventh Pay Commission has
glossed over the core anomalies of the Sixth Pay Commission, which had put
military personnel at a disadvantage. Those have not been resolved, making the
situation worse,” said a senior military official.
Wrong pay fixation of military
officials, particularly in the ranks of Lt Colonel, Colonel and Brigadier, at a
scale much lower than their civilian counterparts, has been identified as a
major issue because a bulk of military officers serve in these three ranks for
the longest part of their career. The services also believe there is a
disparity in grant of allowances to military personnel vis-à-vis civilian
officials.
The defence services feel that the
pay commission has erred in comparing defence expenditure on salaries with
expenditure on operation and maintenance by the armed forces. They feel that
the pay commission did not undertake a similar exercise for the civil services
and the central armed police forces.
“Had the pay commission done that, it
would have been an eye-opener to the nation to know in how little amounts the
armed forces which constitute 30 percent of the central government employees
live, survive and function effectively by efficient management of resources as
compared to their civilian counterparts,” the military official argued.
Wrong pay fixation of military
officials, particularly in the ranks of Lt Colonel, Colonel and Brigadier, at a
scale much lower than their civilian counterparts has been identified by the
defence forces as a major issue because a bulk of military officers serve in
these three ranks for the longest part of their career. The service
headquarters also believe that there is a disparity in grant of a large number
of allowances to military personnel vis-à-vis civilian officials. Even hardship
and field area allowances extended to central armed police forces have not been
offered to the armed forces, they say.
According to a senior military
official, “the traditional parity with civilian employees, which had been under
attack by successive pay commissions against the interest of armed forces, has
been further accentuated by the Seventh Pay Commission, in contravention of its
terms of reference. Its recommendations have brought the armed forces even
below all other uniformed services of paramilitary forces”.
The armed forces believe that the
grant of Non Functional Upgradation (NFU), where a government official gets his
pay increments even if he is not promoted in rank, has been made applicable to
the military personnel in a superficial manner. NFU was granted to all the
civilian officials in the Sixth Pay Commission and the armed forces have been
demanding it since.
“Take the issue of disability allowance. The
civilian employees have been getting a percentage of the basic pay as
disability allowance since 1996. It was extended to us in the Sixth Pay
Commission. Now it has been taken back and military has been reverted to a
slab-based thing,” a senior military official said.
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Why this continuous injustice since decades to Armed Forces ?
ReplyDeleteWhat does the Nation expects ?
Please understand , we cannot expect the Morale of our great forces to be doomed. I humbly appeal to all wise people to do something to restore the
Situation. Regards Major P J Rao Retd.