Wednesday, 15 August 2018

SOLDIERS IN THE SUPREME COURT: A GENIE UNCORKED

300 Army Personnel Move SC Against Prosecution says the headline in The Hindu on the Nation’s 72nd Independence Day. Since last evening this unprecedented event has dominated prime time on all major news channels. And quite understandably, since our soldiers are known more for the stoic dedication with which they serve rather than for petitioning the judiciary on operational issues. Similarly, the Army Headquarters limits itself to presenting views to the Ministry of Defence rather than approaching the judicial system over the heads of this Ministry. Discussion on news channels and newspapers has been restricted to the challenging conditions and scenarios in internal security operations and the legal safeguards available to soldiers under the AFSPA. I have no issue with this and fully endorse the extremely important and very valid points raised in the petition; however, a very vital and equally significant aspect of this unique event has so far been left out of the discussions. It is this that I intend to address in this short article.

            To any soldier, indeed even to an informed lay observer, a very noteworthy aspect is the fact that over 300 soldiers have approached the Supreme Court in their personal capacities on an operational matter. These are serving officers, JCOs and NCOs who are Commanding battalions, companies, platoons and sections in diverse and widely separated areas and for so many of them to have got together, formulated a joint view and thereafter decided to hire an advocate and petition the Supreme Court is, to say the least, both remarkable and extraordinary. It just could not have happened without the silent and tacit concurrence of their senior leadership from their brigade commanders upwards and extending right up to the Army HQ. When one considers the total silence of the Army HQ and the Ministry of Defence, the conviction that they were aware and are quite comfortable with it is reinforced. Rebublic TV had broken the story on 13 Dec, a day before the petition was actually filed and this only reinforces the belief. There are, therefore, three remarkable firsts in this episode- first, serving soldiers approaching the Supreme Court directly in their personal capacities on an operational matter; second, over 300 of them doing so in a collective and well coordinated manner; and third, the abdication by the Army HQ of its responsibility towards soldiers of protecting their interests and doing all that needs to be done with the Government or in the courts towards achieving this end.

            The Army has so far never hesitated in forcefully representing the best interests of its men in cases arising out performance of their duties in internal security operations. This includes defending cases at various levels of the judiciary and at the NHRC; nor has there been any hesitation in moving higher courts right up to the Supreme Court when adverse judgements have been delivered by lower courts. Over the years a very robust system has been developed in the Army towards this- the Adjutant General’s Branch and the Judge Advocate General’s Branch at the Army HQ have large establishments charged with this responsibility. These branches are represented right down to brigade HQ level and there are also HR (Human Rights) staff officers at all formation HQ operating in internal security operational areas to monitor all such cases and aspects and render related advice to formation commanders.

            Despite this considerable wherewithal, the decision to abdicate a command responsibility and let individual soldiers fight their own battles at the Supreme Court does not quite jell. It seems that the wider and long term implications of the decision have either not been fully appreciated or it had been decided to proceed nonetheless. And this leads to the nagging suspicion that there is strong possibility of the Ministry of Defence, and by extension the political leadership, being very much complicit in giving a silent go ahead to the petitioner officers and men.

            The precedent of permitting individual serving service personnel to directly petition the Supreme Court on operational and service issues if permitted to take root will open a whole can of worms. For instance, can commanding officers move the Supreme Court against the Ministry of Defence regarding persisting critical deficiencies of battle gear- night vision devices, ammunition, bullet proof jackets et al? Or pilots similarly take up having to fly obsolete aircraft long past their manufacturer stipulated safe dates? Or submariners take up having to operate submarines with unsafe batteries? As far as I can see, a very dangerous genie has been uncorked and coaxing it back into the bottle is going to be an extremely difficult proposition. The Army and the Ministry of Defence would do well to contemplate and institute damage control measures before it’s too late.