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bala1
20

Here is an ex Army man's thoughts on earthquake devastation in Kashmir and the response to it.

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The story below is the grim reality that we need to accept. I say so not because I wore that uniform with pride for 32 years but because in times of need and calamities, there is nothing but the Armed Forces that our nation falls back to. I need not blow our trumpets but I wish to make some important observation.

I am sure many of you must have watched the news story on the devastation caused by the earthquake in Pakistan and in Kashmir. One thing which stood out was that in both the countries, the dependency to find some sort of immediate relief was bestowed to the armed forces. In both the countries, the civil administration was criticized for its slow reaction, but we must understand that in calamities no administration can function with the kind of speed and efficiency with people who are suffering expect.

Yet there are true stories in Tangdhar (My Regiment had the pleasure of serving here) where our soldiers lay buried in their bunkers but their colleagues were out to help the civil population. Many of them were out on patrols to those places which were cut off, carrying whatever relief materials they could for the local population. The army shared whatever ration it had with the locals and gave them shelter on that cold night.The Air Force and the army Aviation did not flinch but flew sorties after sorties to save lives and our army established field hospitals under tents and got down to the business of saving lives of the civilians.

It is the same army in Kashmir which has been accused of human rights violation. It is the same army whom personalities accused of committing crimes against the people of Kashmir. It is the same army which today is held in high esteem and people of Kashmir want the administration to be handed over to the army. I had seen this happening in the North East. I had seen this in the Punjab in the worst of insurgency in the eighties. I am now seeing this in Kashmir.

This earthquake brought misery to the people of Pakistan and Kashmir. It has caused so much of destruction that it would take years to re-build the cities and human lives. Yet this earthquake may also show the beginning of the end of the hostile attitude of people of Kashmir towards the armed forces. It might even bring Pakistan and India closer provided we are willing to view each other without suspicion and do not see meaning where none exist.

The Aman Sethu bridge may have suffered damage. It is only cosmetic. That damage can be repaired. It is the human mind which needs repair to forget and forgive. May be this earth quake will provide that impetus for more peaceful days in Kashmir as well as in India and Pakistan. Inshah Allah, it is indeed possible for it is only in times of need that we come together and today that time has come once again.

The armed forces will be forgotten soon of their contributions to the people of Kashmir in times of need. It does not matter for we are used to it. We shall be remembered only in times of need. Isn't that a great feeling for people like us who wore that uniform and more so for those who continue to wear it? That we are wanted in times of need is indeed a great feeling to live the rest of our lives.

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From India, Madras
bala1
20

One more on the subject:

AGAR ARMY NA HOTI TO HAMARA KYA HOTA?

TEETWAL, (LoC), Oct 14: "Kya Aap Mere Gharwalon Ko

Phone Kar Sakte Ho...Mein Aapko Number Deta Hoon

(Would you please call my family members...I will give

you my phone number," said a soldier of the Indian

Army, fighting a different battle this time.

"Please tell them I am fine. My mother must have

nearly died after hearing about the devastating

earthquake," he said.

Hailing from Dakur near Anand in Gujarat, the soldier

and his unit have been posted in the Tangdhar area for

the past one year.

"I have not been able to contact my family members

after the tremblor struck Jammu and Kashmir on October

8," he said.

Though the Army has established a phone connection at

Tangdhar, preference is given to locals and officials

of the civil administration besides volunteers who are

in the area for rescue and relief operations.

Vajra Signals were able to restore phone links at

Tangdhar a day after the earthquake hit the area.

They have set up a phone booth near the helipad at

Tangdhar from where the people are making free calls

to their relatives in other parts of the State and the

country.

"There is an endless line of callers and by the time

our turn comes we are ordered to march back to the

post," he said.

Soldiers of 5 Dogra, 3 Punjab and Army Engineering

Corps could be seen engaged in relief and rescue

operations in the entire Karnah area, devastated by

the tremblor.

"Kya Yeh Mujhe TV Pe Dikhayenge (Can they show me on

TV)?" asked another soldier, pointing towards a crew

of a private television channel busy taking an

interview of a senior Army official.

"At least my family members would come to know that I

am alive. By now they must have thought I am dead,"

said the soldier, hailing from Gwalior in Madhya

Pradesh.

The people of Jammu and Kashmir, particularly from the

earthquake affected areas, have appreciated the Army

for its prompt response and untiring efforts in rescue

and relief operations.

From Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to the common man

on the streets, everybody is praising the Army.

"Agar Army Na Hoti To Hamara Kya Hota (I wonder what

would have been our fate had the Army not been

there),'' said Mohammad Khaleel, a local of this

village, lying close to Line of Control (LoC) and

almost levelled due to the devastating earthquake.

The Army managed to reach, within three days, all the

quake-hit villages which have remained inaccessible to

other agencies even today, six days after the

devastating tremor struck Jammu and Kashmir and its

neighbouring areas on October 8, killing thousands of

people.

''Kya Karen Sahab. Yeh Hamari Duty Hai. Fouji Ka

Kartavya Hai Desh Ke Kaam Aana (What to do this is our

job. A soldier has to live and die for the nation,"

said another trooper.

A resident of Haryana, he said it is heart-rending to

carry the body of your colleague with whom one has

spent years together.

"The Army too has suffered heavy casualties due to the

earthquake. We have carried the coffins of our

brothers. It is distressing. After all we too are

human beings. How far can you control your emotions?"

he asked.

Emotions notwithstanding, the saviours continue with

their humanitarian efforts and relief and rescue

operations in quake-ravaged areas of Jammu and

Kashmir.

Unquote

Bala

From India, Madras
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