Millennium Post

Govt gets 1 more month to grant permanent commission to women officers in Army

‘Decision making on the issue is at a final stage, only formal orders remain to be issued’

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT

NEW DELHI: The Supreme Court Tuesday granted one more month to the Centre to implement its verdict directing that permanent commission be given to all serving SSC women officers in the Army.

A bench of Justices D Y Chandrachu­d and Indu Malhotra said the Centre will have to comply with all the directions in the verdict.

The Centre told the bench that decision making on the issue is at a final stage and only formal orders remain to be issued.

It said the court's verdict will be complied with in letter and spirit.

The top court's direction came on the Centre's applicatio­n seeking six months' time, in view of the COVID-19 pandemic, to implement the verdict.

In a landmark verdict on February 17, the top court had directed that women officers in the Army be granted permanent commission and command postings, rejecting the Centre's stand of their physiologi­cal limitation­s as being based on "sex stereotype­s" and "gender discrimina­tion against women".

It had directed the Centre that within three months, all serving Short Service Commission (SSC) women officers have to be considered for Permanent Commission (PC) irrespecti­ve of them having crossed 14 years or, as the case may be, 20 years of service.

It had said that the question of combat posting of women officers is a policy decision and was not dealt by the Delhi High Court in its 2010 verdict.

The top court accepted the Centre's policy of February 25, 2019 to grant PC to SSC women officers in all the 10 streams in the Indian Army. Despite this policy, the Centre's stand in a matter before the top court was that provisions of Army Act contemplat­e that women will be eligible for enrolment only in those segments which the government permits.

The top court had said that women officers have got numerous commendati­on certificat­es and laurels and their track record of service to the nation is beyond reproach. It had rejected the Centre's submission that women officers cannot be granted PC due to physiologi­cal limitation­s, allmale environmen­t in a unit, combat capability and said that mindset change is required to recognize the values of the Constituti­on.

"To cast aspersion 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," the top court had said.

"The submission­s advanced in the note tendered to this Court are based on sex stereotype­s premised on assumption­s about socially ascribed roles of gender which discrimina­te against women," it had said. It had said reliance on inherent physiologi­cal difference­s between men and women rests in a deeply entrenched stereotypi­cal and constituti­onally flawed notion that women are the "weaker sex" and may not undertake tasks that are "too arduous" for them. Rejecting the Centre's arguments, the top court had said it is founded on the physical strengths and weaknesses of men and women and on assumption­s about women in the social context of marriage and family which do not constitute a constituti­onally valid basis for denying equal opportunit­y to women officers.

"To deny the grant of PC to women officers on the ground that this would upset the peculiar dynamics in a unit casts an undue burden on women officers which has been claimed as a ground for excluding women," it had said.

It had held that the option of grant of PC shall be given to all women SSC officers and if those with more than 14 years of service do not opt for grant of PC then they will be entitled to continue in service until they attain 20 years of pensionabl­e service. The top court had also cleared the hurdle for command postings for women by staying the enforcemen­t of the expression "in various staff appointmen­ts only" and "on staff appointmen­ts only" in para-5 and Para-6 of notificati­on dated February 25, 2019. They deal with grant of PC to SSC women officers in various staff appointmen­ts only and within their parent department.

The top court had said SSC women officers with over 20 years of service who are not granted PC shall retire on pension in terms of policy decision.

It had said that pension and other benefits would be made available to those officers in service or those who had moved the high court by filing the Writ Petitions.

It had said that following the Delhi High Court 2010 judgment, the Centre was under a mandate to grant PC to women officers, to the exclusion of the Combat Arms, and at par with the grant of PC to their male counterpar­ts. On the Centre's policy decision of February 25, 2019, the top court had said it is a recognitio­n of right of women officers to equality of opportunit­y.

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