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Home Border Management

Food Goes Foul

Somesh Goyal by Somesh Goyal
October 13, 2022
in Border Management
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Food Goes Foul
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The social media outburst of a BSF jawan must have come as a rude shock to the supervisory echelons of BSF.  Other Central Armed Police Forces (CAPFs) and State Police Forces will also carry out a reality check.

Electronic Media is bound to go to the Jawans’ messes all over the country and flood the news space on their channels with the footage and comments of the troops and officers. BSF on their part has rushed senior officers to carry out a fact-finding inquiry. MHA has also called for a report from the Director General of BSF on this embarrassing video of poor and insufficient food being made available to the troops deployed on the LOC in Jammu & Kashmir.  A preliminary report has been received by MHA and the detailed report is awaited. The public at large is also very critical of the CAPF leadership on social media for their failure to ensure good food to the defenders of our borders. The whole episode has unfortunately raised suspicions about the quality of life of our troops on the borders.

The Inspector general of BSF in Jammu has claimed that constable Tej Bahadur Yadav of the 29th Battalion is a habitual offender and has earned several punishments in his career.  The manner in which Yadav has bypassed the established channels of communication to voice his grievance is questionable as per service rules and needs to be dealt with effectively so that discipline and morale of other troops, in the long run, do not become a casualty. The history of delinquency on the part of Yadav does not undermine the need for an inquiry into his allegations of poor food, long working hours, and corruption by the officers of his unit.

Of late, it has become common for officers and men of the uniformed services to post their pictures in uniform and with weapons and also disclose their locations on social media, which calls for revisiting the social media policy being practiced in the CAPFs and in the state police forces. Voluminous instructions have been issued by the concerned authorities in this regard which are seldom translated into vernacular understood by jawans.

A gist of these instructions is rarely prepared and circulated to all the field units and posted on the notice boards meant for the jawans.  Proper briefing on such matters may also not be taking place because the junior leadership at the ground level itself is blissfully unaware of the import of such policies.

I have had the fortune of serving in the BSF and SSB where the opportunity to supervise and deploy battalions on the LOC was also part of my responsibility. I can assure the readers that the police leadership is acutely sensitive about the food served to the jawans.  All visiting officers like to share the food with the jawans at the forward locations and if any deficiencies are noticed appropriate measures are taken to make them good.

After the Monday parade in the districts, the senior-most police officer visits the cookhouse and samples the food himself to ensure its quality. It was a custom in the BSF, which I was happy to introduce in the SSB also that whenever any senior officer visited the forward locations he carried sufficient amounts of fresh vegetables and fruits for the troops.  I sincerely hope that the practice still continues.

With better road communication and improved logistic support, there is no reason why fresh vegetables and fruits, condiments, tinned food, and other rations should not be available to the troops. There are two systems of procuring rations in the CAPFs. Wherever the troops are deployed under the command of the Army on the LC or the LOC, the responsibility to provide rations as per the laid down scale lies with the Army.

At all other locations, the messes are run on a cooperative basis where a committee representing all ranks of the unit purchases rations after a market survey. Since the day-to-day running of the kitchen is participatory in nature, there are virtually no complaints in this system. There are certain occasions, particularly during winters and natural calamities like floods leading to disruption of road and air communication which may lead to an occasional shortage of supplies but then the hardy troops of CAPFs are used to such situations and do not complain about it.

However, the issues highlighted by Yadav through social media need to be thoroughly examined by the BSF, and the loopholes in the system should be plugged immediately.

Tags: BSF jawanCAPFsindiaJammu & KashmirLOCSSB
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Somesh Goyal

Somesh Goyal

Somesh Goyal is an IPS officer of the 1984 batch allocated to Himachal Pradesh. He is a former Director General of Police of HP. He has also served in several central armed police forces in internal security, anti terrorism and border guarding roles. Somesh Goyal is an alumnus of National Defence College. He writes on matters of internal security, terrorism, India's strategic interests, border guarding, police and prison reforms and India's neighbourhood.

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