Paramilitary DGs meet Home Minister over 7th Pay Commission
Jun 15, 2016, 10.21 PM | Source: PTI
A number of paramilitary chiefs met Union Home Minister Rajnath Singh on June 15 in order to present their proposals and demands vis-a-vis the forthcoming implementations of the 7th Pay Commission
A number of paramilitary chiefs met Union Home Minister Rajnath Singh on June 15 in order to present their proposals and demands vis-a-vis the forthcoming implementations of the 7th Pay Commission.
Five Directors General (DGs), including Krishna Chaudhary (ITBP), K Durga Prasad (CRPF), Archana Ramasundaram (SSB), Surender Singh (CISF) and O P Singh (NDRF), met the Minister at his office in South Block here and presented a memorandum to him.
The government in January had set up a high-powered panel headed by Cabinet Secretary P K Sinha to process the recommendations of the 7th Pay Commission which will have a bearing on the remuneration of 47 lakh central government employees and 52 lakh pensioners.
The Empowered Committee of Secretaries will function as a Screening Committee to process the recommendations with regard to all relevant factors of the Commission in an expeditious detailed and holistic fashion. Read on Money Control
अर्धसैनिक बलों के डीजी गृहमंत्री से मिले
नई दिल्ली | कईअर्धसैनिक बलों के प्रमुख सातवें वेतन आयोग के आगामी क्रियान्वयन के सिलसिले में अपनी मांग और प्रस्तावों को लेकर बुधवार को केंद्रीय गृह मंत्री राजनाथ सिंह से मुलाकात की। कृष्ण चौधरी (आईटीबीपी), के. दुर्गा प्रसाद (सीआरपीएफ), अर्चना रामसुंदरम (एसएसबी), सुरेंद्र सिंह (सीआईएसएफ) और पी सिंह (एनडीआरएफ) सहित पांच महानिदेशक (डीजी) साउथ ब्लॉक में मंत्री से उनके कार्यालय में मिले थे और ज्ञापन सौंपा था। Read on Bhaskar
COMMENTS
Media and most of the civil administration personnels refer the police contingent and paramilitary and military through the same lens and generalise and address them with a general word 'JAWAN' Pl0ice forces are known as constable and Military persons are commonly known as ;SOLDIERS'. Soldiers use Missile to rifles to combat with enemies Where as polices and para military uses only rifles and light striking weapons. Is it not necessary to distinguish the forces in according to task entrusted to perform their duties instead of addressing every uniformed person as 'JAWANS'?
These are not para military chiefs but Central Armed Police Forces Chiefs.They like to call themselves para military because of the respect that the term 'military' enjoys in the country which the police does not.