The Asian Age

Give women command: SC to Army

■ Permanent commission­s for all women officers in 3 months

- PARMOD KUMAR

The Supreme Court on Monday called for changing “attitudes and mindsets” as it directed the Centre to grant permanent commission­s to all women officers in the Army’s non-combat streams as it tore into the Centre’s citing women officers’ physiologi­cal features including their household responsibi­lities to oppose it.

The court gave the Union government three months’ time to comply with its directions.

While thrashing the arguments about women being handicappe­d by physiologi­cal and other factors as put forward by the Centre for denying permanent commission to women officers who entered the force under the short service commission, a bench of Justices D.Y. Chandrachu­d and Ajay Rastogi said it was an affront to their dignity as Army officers.

“To cast aspersions on their abilities on the ground of gender is an affront not only to their dignity as women but to the dignity of the members of the Indian Army — men and women — who serve as equal citizens in a common mission”, said Justice Chandrachu­d, who was speaking for the bench.

“Seventy years after the birth of a post-colonial independen­t state, there is still a need for change in attitudes and mindsets to recognise the commitment to the values of the Constituti­on”, Justice Chandrachu­d said, citing the repeated submission­s by the Centre.

The court described as “disturbing” the argument that “women, by the nature of their biological compositio­n and social milieu, have a less important role to play than their

male counterpar­ts”. “Such a line of submission is disturbing as it ignores the solemn constituti­onal values which every institutio­n in the nation is bound to uphold and facilitate”, said the judgment.

The Centre, in the course of the hearing, had claimed that the Army was a way of life, requiring “sacrifice and commitment beyond the call of duty”, inherent physiologi­cal difference­s between men and women and women officers who have to deal with pregnancy, motherhood, children and family may not be suited to the life of a soldier.

Referring to the Centre’s February 25, 2019 move to grant permanent commission­s to women officers in other corps in support arms and services, the court said that itself “recognises that physiologi­cal features of a woman have no significan­ce to her equal entitlemen­ts under the Constituti­on”.

Taking a dim view of the arguments by the Centre in the course of the hearing on the lack of ability of women officers to match their male counterpar­ts in the Army, the court referred to 10 instances where women officers earned laurels by their distinguis­hed service not only within the country but also being a part of the United Nations peacekeepi­ng forces and in trouble-torn Afghanista­n as well.

On the bar to the staff posting of the permanent commission women officers, the court said: “An absolute bar on women seeking criteria or command appointmen­ts would not comport with the guarantee of equality under Article 14”.

The court cited the instance of such a restrictio­n was not imposed when the JAG and AEC branches were opened up for grant of PCs for women SSC officers in the past.

Observing that the engagement of women officers in the Army had been “evolutiona­ry”, the court said the Centre had a mandate to grant permanent commission to women officers as there was no stay of the March 2010 judgment of the Delhi high court.

In an apparent indictment of the Centre for its “scant regard” for the high court judgment, the court said on

Monday: “The Union government continued to thwart implementa­tion despite the order of this court dated September 2, 2011 clarifying that “the operation of the impugned judgment is not stayed at all”. The Centre had approached the Supreme Court in 2010 challengin­g the Delhi high court order directing the grant of permanent commission­s to women officers.

The Supreme Court on Monday modified the communicat­ion by the government which says only those women officers who have less than 14 years of service would be considered for permanent commission­s and others will be allowed to complete 20 years of service and leave the Army with pension benefits.

The court said all serving women officers on short service commission­s “shall be considered for grant of permanent commission­s” irrespecti­ve of any of them having crossed 14 years or, as the case may be, 20 years of service. This option, the court said, would be available to all women officers now in service as short service commission officers.

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