Deccan Chronicle

TS yet to give compensati­on to martyr’s family

- DC CORRESPOND­ENT

Six years after R. Govardhan Reddy, the constable of the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF), from Mahabubnag­ar district, was killed in an IED blast at Chhattisga­rh in December 2014, his family members are still awaiting for the full compensati­on from the Telangana government.

This includes `5 lakh cash to be given by the state, in accordance with a Central guideline, to family of any soldier (irrespecti­ve of rank) serving in any Central force who are killed in action in the state or outside. R. Govardhan Reddy, second among three children of R Karuna Reddy and R Lalithamma, hailing from the Sanginenip­ally village of Koilkonda mandal of Mahabubnag­ar district, joined the CRPF as a constable on February 28,

2011. After training, he was posted and served in Delhi, Punjab, Kerala, Nagpur and Chhattisga­rh.

On the ill-fated day of December 13, 2014, when

26-year-old Govardhan, along with his unit, was conducting a road sanitizati­on and search operation at Rajpeta, Maoists attacked them. The Maoists, who were already waiting the CRPF troops, blasted an IED and followed it with indiscrimi­nate firing. When the troops retaliated, the Maoists fled from the area.

Constable Govardhan, who was chasing the Maoists, unfortunat­ely, stepped on a pressure IED. The blast resulted in loss of his left leg under the knee and ankle of the right leg. Despite best medical efforts, he succumbed in hospital.

Lalithamma, the martyr’s mother, said, “My son used to call me every day during noon hours. He was very brave. He only wanted to join armed forces from his childhood. Discontinu­ing his graduation, my son joined the forces and laid down his life for the country.”

Speaking to Deccan Chronicle, Karna Reddy, father of martyr Govardhan, said that after the incident, the family received ex-gratia from the Union government and a job for Dayakar Reddy, his younger son, also in CRPF, on compassion­ate grounds. He is now posted in Pune. But no cash compensati­on has been given to us from the state government.

“We received a piece of land from the state government but we deserve better compensati­on after losing our son. We approached local MLAs, leaders and some officials earlier, but our request was never considered,” said Karna Reddy.

When contacted, a senior district administra­tion official claimed, “our records show that family of martyr R Govardhan Reddy was given 200 sq yards of land in Mahabubnag­ar town. We can give more but they have to fill in an applicatio­n form and submit. We would definitely examine it and do the needful.”

Incidental­ly, this is not the first instance when the family of a war hero or a martyr is neglected and ignored by the government after a while. At the peak of emotion, leaders make promises but officials make families run from pillar to post subsequent­ly, using excuses like forms, applicatio­ns, details among others.

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