Business Standard

Rajnath approves NCC expansion

Strength boosted to 1.5 million with 100,000 more cadets, one-third of them women

- AJAI SHUKLA

Defence Minister Rajnath Singh on Sunday approved a major expansion of the National Cadet Corps (NCC) in 173 border and coastal districts of the country.

In its most substantia­l expansion in recent years, the size of the NCC will be boosted from the current 1.4 million cadets to about 1.5 million cadets. One-third of the additional cadets will be women.

In October, the Ministry of Defence (MOD) had announced that the strength of the NCC would rise to 1.5 million by 2023. However, Prime Minister Narendra Modi fast-tracked that expansion in his Independen­ce Day address on Saturday.

“More than 1,000 schools and colleges have been identified in border and coastal districts where NCC will be introduced,” announced the MOD on Sunday.

“This will not only provide exposure to the youth of the border and coastal areas to military training and discipline­d way of life but will also motivate them to join the armed forces,” it said.

Over the years, the NCC has provided discipline­d and reliable personnel to assist the government in natural disaster and other emergencie­s. Over 50,000 NCC cadets have been pressed into service to help the government implement the lockdown during the ongoing novel coronaviru­s crisis.

NCC is popular amongst school and college students across the country. It involves military instructor­s teaching students drill, weapons firing, first aid, adventure training, camping and other military subjects. Students who achieve high levels of proficienc­y are offered preferenti­al selection as commission­ed officers in the military.

A total of 814 NCC units across the country already provide training in 16,597 schools and colleges, the MOD told Parliament on March 7, 2018. These are grouped into 17 regional directorat­es spread across the country and are headed by a lieutenant general based in New Delhi.

The administra­tive staff, instructor­s and training are primarily funded from the army’s budget, which has allocated ~1,689 crore to NCC for the current year. In addition, individual states also contribute towards the cost of NCC training in the schools and colleges under their respective jurisdicti­ons.

Prime Minister Modi had fast-tracked the expansion in his I-day address

Many more schools and colleges across the country have applied for NCC training to be extended to their educationa­l establishm­ents. However, capacity constraint­s limit the number the army can oblige.

To cater to the expansion, the MOD says a total of 83 NCC units will be upgraded — 53 from the army, 20 from the navy and 10 from the air force.

“Army will provide training and administra­tive support to the NCC units located in the border areas, navy shall provide support to NCC units in the coastal areas and similarly, air force will provide support to the NCC units located close to the air force stations. The NCC expansion plan will be implemente­d in partnershi­p with states,” said the MOD.

The NCC was formed under the National Cadet Corps Act of 1948. It has its origins in the “University Corps”, created during World War I, under the Indian Defence Act of 1917, to make up for the shortage of able-bodied personnel to carry out law and order duties.

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? A total of ~1,689 crore have been allocated to the NCC for the current year
PHOTO: REUTERS A total of ~1,689 crore have been allocated to the NCC for the current year

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