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‘Soldiers deprived of snow glasses, boots, requisite food’

New Delhi: Indian Army troops do not have snow glasses and multi-purpose boots to wear and requisite sanctioned food to eat in high altitude areas in Siachen and Ladakh, thus exposing them to inclement weather causing ailments due to extreme cold conditions, the Comptroller and Auditor General (CAG) has said in a report.

The CAG report on Union Government (Defence Services)-Army said Army troops are also deprived of the authorized daily consumption of food in the high altitude areas, sources said. The report also states the calorie intake of the troops is compromised as high as 82 percent.

CAG laid the report on Union Government (Defence Services)-Army in the Rajya Sabha but failed to lay it in Lok Sabha. This stopped Comptroller and Auditor General Rajiv Mehrishi from releasing the report.

But sources in Rajya Sabha, who accessed the report, claimed that the audit highlights the condition of the Indian Army in high altitude areas.

The shortage in snow goggles is between 62 percent to 98 percent exposing soldiers’ faces and eyes to extreme weather in high altitude areas. Worse, the troops had to wear old and used multi-purpose boots after the force did not receive boots between November 2015 and September 2016.

The situation is very pathetic, said sources adding that the troops who are deployed at high altitude guarding Indian borders are given old versions of face masks, jackets, and sleeping bags. “The troops are deprived of the benefits of using improved products,” the CAG report stated.

The report also highlights that the lack of research and development by defense laboratories led to continued dependence on imports.

Further, for the troops posted in high altitudes, special scales of rations are authorized to meet their daily energy requirements. But substitutes in lieu of scaled items were authorized on the cost to cost basis, which resulted in a supply of a reduced quantity of substitutes.

This compromised the calorie intake of the troops by as high as 82 percent.

At Leh station, the CAG found that special ration items were shown as issued to troops for consumption without their actual receipts.

 

 

SOURCE: IANS