The secret to an alert jawan is sufficient and uninterrupted sleep when off duty. But it took two recent studies by BSF headquarters here to realise that unbroken sleep for 2-3 hours was but a luxury for its personnel guarding the country’s borders day and night.
Setting out to reverse the years of injustice meted out to the humble jawan, BSF Director General Raman Srivastava has now issued orders to all his Frontier IGs to ensure that every jawan gets not only 6 hours of uninterrupted sleep in a 24-hour cycle, but is also given a weekly off to attend to his personal needs and requirements while remaining available in the border outpost for emergencies.
With depression cases rising among the Central forces, mainly on account of duty fatigue and apathy of their seniors to their requests for leave, Mr Srivastava took cue from the two studies commissioned by the BSF on the rest and relief patterns of jawans deployed at the borders. The studies threw up some shocking facts. The first being that, on an average, a jawan is engaged in operational duties for 13-15 hours everyday, besides 2-3 hours of other general maintenance duties. It was also found that jawans in almost all the frontiers get to sleep only 2-3 hours at a stretch and go without a single day off in the entire month.
The fact that the poor jawan is at the mercy of his commandant to clear his annual leave, who uses the non-transparency in leave sanction policy to keep his subordinate waiting, did not help matters either. Mr Srivastava, while warning his frontier IGs that the sleep-deprived jawan would either collapse under the workload in a few weeks or would find time to sleep on operational duties, sought an immediate review of the deployment patterns and border domination plan with a view to ensuring that “every jawan gets at least 6-7 hours of uninterrupted sleep every 24 hours and also gets at least one day off every week.”
from:Economics Times
Tuesday, June 8, 2010
Nag hits the spot in 3 second...
The Indian Nag anti-tank guided missile (ATGM) was test-fired successfully at close range (500-metres ) at the Army field firing range at Shamirpet in Andhra Pradesh on Sunday.
Anti-tank guided missile Nag on Sunday successfully destroyed the target in three seconds after its launch from a Nag missile carrier (Namica), Nag Project Director S.S. Mishra told TheHindu.
Defence Research and Development Organisation's Chief Controller (Missile Systems) K. Shekhar, DRDL director and programme director of Integrated Guided Missile Development Programme P. Venugopalan and personnel from of the office of the Director General of Mechanised Forces were present during the test-firing.
with output from:the hindu
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