Gulf News

Supreme Court puts army women in command positions

APEX COURT SLAMS GOVERNMENT’S ARGUMENTS AGAINST THE POLICY

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India’s top court yesterday ordered the federal government to grant permanent commission and command positions to female officers in the army on par with men, asserting that the government’s arguments against the policy were based on gender stereotype­s.

The court’s decision, seen as a watershed moment for the Indian military, would mean that women can extend their short service roles in noncombat support units such as education, law and logistics until they want to retire and rise to the rank of colonel, based on merit.

Currently, female officers can serve for only 10 to 14 years in the army. “This is a historic decision and a significan­t day for not only those who are serving in the army but for also those who desire to join the forces,” said Lt Col Anjali Bisht.

The Supreme Court’s decision, however, does not mean that female officers will serve in army combat units such as the infantry, artillery or armoured corps.

The decision comes days after the government told the court that women were not suitable for commanding posts in the army, saying male troops were not prepared yet to accept female officers. It also said that male and female officers could not be treated equally when it came to postings because the “physical capacity of women officers remains a challenge for command of units”.

The court said that such arguments were against the concept of equality. Previously, Chief of Defence Staff Gen Bipin Rawat raked up a controvers­y when he said in an interview with a news channel that women were not ready for combat roles because they were responsibl­e for raising children and would accuse male officers of peeping into their quarters. “She will say somebody is peeping, so we will have to give a sheet around her,” Rawat told CNN-News18.

The petitioner­s in the case demanding equal rights for female officers welcomed the court’s decision. “This is very, very significan­t,” said Meenakshi Lekhi, a lawyer. “A denial of particular progressio­n was something which is inherently unequal and unjust.”

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 ?? PTI ?? All women contingent of the Indian Army during the rehearsal for the Republic Day parade at Rajpath in New Delhi.
PTI All women contingent of the Indian Army during the rehearsal for the Republic Day parade at Rajpath in New Delhi.

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