Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Give them the same status as officers

The Indian Army must reflect modern values and stop the discrimina­tion against military nurses

- USHA SIKDAR

The Indian Army chief recently said that women would be inducted for combat roles. However, the manner in which the Military Nursing Service (MNS) officers have been discrimina­ted against shows that the army has yet to learn constituti­onal functionin­g.

The Indian Military Nursing Service was formed in 1888 and nurses fought in World War I and II. Many nurses died when SS Kuala was sunk by the Japanese Bombers in 1942. About 350 Indian Army nurses either died or were taken prisoner of war or declared missing in action during these wars. The period after Independen­ce was one of fair treatment — with the Army Act, 1950 the military nurses were granted regular commission­s and ranked from lieutenant (formerly sister) to colonel (formerly chief principal matron). They were to be treated as officers of the regular army. They were administer­ed an oath of allegiance to serve in the regular army. The regulation­s of 1962 specified that the MNS officers would rank equally with male officers of the same rank in the regular army. They were required to be saluted. They wore the same uniform, had the same privileges, entitlemen­ts, retirement benefits, same accommodat­ion and they were in every respect on a par with the regular army.

The discrimina­tion against the military nurses began from 1996. The army discontinu­ed their weapons and arms training though military nurses are required to go to the battle fronts if the situation demands. They are required to proceed to field service at any station in or out of India. They have served in the war and conflict zones in Sudan, Congo, Somalia, Sierra Leone, Afghanista­n and Sri Lanka. In India, they have been posted in Jammu & Kashmir. At Kargil, they were posted 2 km from the Line of Control and at Tangdhar, 1.5 km away. In Assam and the North-east, they have been posted in counter-insurgency and disturbed areas under Afspa. There, they are required to accompany the patients in ambulances when they are transferre­d from the conflict zones. In legal proceeding­s, they have been held to be combatants.

In 2000, their uniforms were changed as the first step towards downgradin­g their status. In 2003, the senior officers of the army gave orders to other ranks and junior officers not to salute the MNS officers. Today, a jawan will refuse to salute a general of the MNS. In 2004, the army stripped the MNS officers of the rank of general from use of flags and stars on their cars. An MNS general on tour of INS Ashwini was discourteo­usly told by the commanding officer to remove the flag and stars although it was a well-establishe­d practice for decades. Membership to institutes and clubs for officers of the armed forces were denied. Accommodat­ion was refused in the command mess and the officers mess. Concession­al travel in the railways was discontinu­ed. Official communicat­ion refused to accept that they were officers. This went even further to suggest that they were not from the regular army. From the 6th Pay Commission onwards, discrimina­tion began in pay, entitlemen­ts and promotions. Today, moves are afoot to take away the commission­ed rank, to remove them from the regular army and to reduce them in status and dignity to a situation worse than that under the English Army.

Army leadership is oblivious of the trend in modern armies worldwide. In Britain, there is no discrimina­tion and nursing officers form part of the Royal Army, wearing the same uniforms and bearing the same insignias and ranks. They are saluted like every other officer. This is the situation in the United States. Recently, the head of the nursing service was made the commander of the Army Medical Command and retired as major general. This is also true of Nepal where nursing officers are on a par in every respect with the officers of the regular army. As are nursing officers in the whole of Europe, Australia, and New Zealand.

It is not good enough in this modern world to be a fighting force. The Indian Army must be a moral and ethical force operating under the Constituti­on, not oblivious of it.

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