India plans to build more hospitals on eastern border
India is not only scaling up its military capabilities along the China border but also creating medical infrastructure at strategic locations and ramping up the capacity of hospitals in forward areas to provide better medical care to its troops, officials familiar with the move said.
Three new hospitals will be raised under the China-centric Eastern Command over the next three years with a combined capacity of 475 beds, while two medical facilities are being upgraded in Leh and Misamari (Assam), as part of an overarching plan for capacity enhancement along the Chinese border, the officials said.
The new hospitals under the Kolkata-based Eastern Command are coming up in Panagarh (West Bengal), Rangapahar (Nagaland) and Likabali (Assam).
The defence ministry has shared the details of these medical projects with a parliamentary panel responsible for oversight of the ministry’s functioning.
Having “identified voids” in healthcare for troops in forward areas, the ministry has also briefed the parliamentary standing committee on defence on its plans to set up new hospitals in eastern Ladakh (200 beds), Chungthang in Sikkim (50 beds) and Borarupak in Arunachal Pradesh (49 beds).
“With deployment of more forces along the northern borders based on threat perception, there has to be an equal emphasis on building overall capacities including health facilities,” said a top defence ministry official familiar with the plan to upgrade medical infrastructure.
India is strengthening its deployments in the eastern sector, with the raising of a new mountain strike corps at Panagarh and stationing of front-line Sukhoi-30 fighter planes and weaponised helicopters.
The military has also reactivated a string of advanced landing grounds near the border, deployed supersonic cruise missiles and plans to base special operations aircraft in the eastern sector.
“Medical care has to be proportionate to the number of troops in a particular sector. Only then can we give our soldiers the requisite medical cover,” said the official cited above, requesting anonymity.
The panel has asked the ministry to keep it informed about how the new medical projects are shaping and identify more areas where healthcare voids exist.
Experts say it’s a step in the right direction.
“There’s an overall trend of forward posturing along the China border in view of evolving security environment,” said AS Lamba, a former vice chief.
“And in keeping with this posturing, our infrastructure for maintaining and sustaining troops, including medical facilities, has to be appropriately pushed forward,” Lamba added.
NEW DELHI:
WHAT HAPPENED
A hung parliament emerged from the 1996 elections in which the Congress government of PV Narasimha Rao was defeated. The BJP became the largest party in Parliament with 161 MPs and formed a government under the leadership of Atal Bihari Vajpayee but it only lasted 13 days. Regional and Left leaders came together and offered the leadership to former prime minister VP Singh, who declined it. They turned to veteran West Bengal chief minister Jyoti Basu, but the CPI(M) decided that it would not participate in the government and declined the offer, a decision Basu would later describe as a “historic blunder.” Theythendecidedto prop up HD Deve Gowda as the Prime Minister. Deve Gowda’s party, Janata Dal, only had 46 MPs.
The Left Front and Congress lent their support, but the Deve Gowda government couldn’t last beyond a year after the then Congress president Sitaram Kesri decided to pull the plug and insisted on a change in the Prime Ministership. The UF constituents, after cancelling each other out, picked IK Gujral . Gujral was seen as a non-threatening figure since he did not have a mass base of his own.
The government, however, did not complete its full term due to internal squabbling and because of differences with Congress. The Jain Commission Report on Rajiv Gandhi’s assassination hinted that the Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK), a UF component, had a role to play in it.
The Congress insisted on the DMK’s removal from the coalition while Gujral decided to stick with the party. India went to the polls once again in 1998, and this time the BJP came to power.