Capt asks MoD to reverse decision to cap tuition fee for martyrs’ children : The Tribune India

Join Whatsapp Channel

Capt asks MoD to reverse decision to cap tuition fee for martyrs’ children

CHANDIGARH: Punjab Chief Minister Captain Amarinder Singh has called the Defence Ministry''s decision of restricting educational expenses paid to children of martyrs "immoral" and "unprincipled".

Capt asks MoD to reverse decision to cap tuition fee for martyrs’ children

Chief Minister Amarinder Singh has said the decision would make a mockery of the scheme''s objective. File photo



Tribune News Service
Chandigarh, December 1

Punjab Chief Minister Captain Amarinder Singh has written to Defence Minister Nirmala Sitharaman asking the ministry to review its decision to restrict its educational expenses paid to children of martyrs.

In a letter to the ministry, the chief minister has called its decision to cap educational expenses paid to martyrs’ children at Rs 10,000 “immoral” and “unprincipled”.

READ: MoD caps tuition fee for martyrs’ kids at Rs 10,000

Restricting the expenses would make a mockery of the objective behind the scheme that was announced in the Lok Sabha in 1971, the chief minister said, saying it was “undermining the sacrifice of the defence personnel”, and that it was made in “shameful disregard’ for the contribution of the armed personnel to the country and its citizens.

“The fee being paid to the children of martyrs and disabled soldiers was a small price in exchange for what they had given, and continued to give, to the nation,” Singh, an ex-army man, said.

Singh, who had recently reacted strongly to the Defence Ministry’s decision to allow the services of Army personnel to be used in the construction of bridges for the Indian Railways in Maharashtra, said the nation could ill-afford to show such disrespect to its soldiers.

”The latest decision was not only unethical and immoral but also against the interest of the nation, which needed to keep the morale of its armed forces high at all times, especially at the present juncture when India was facing all kinds of internal and external threats to its peace and stability,” he said.

“The welfare of the armed forces and their kin was a national responsibility, which the Central Government, through the Ministry of Defence, was duty-bound to fulfil,” the chief minister said, adding that the decision signalled the gradual erosion in the government’s respect for the defence forces.

The decision will reportedly affect 32,000 students in various institutions while saving the Central Government Rs 4 crore per annum, and will be implemented from next year.

 

 

Top News

Deeply biased: MEA on US report citing human rights violations in India

Deeply biased: MEA on US report citing human rights violations in India

The annual report of the State Department highlights instanc...

Family meets Amritpal Singh in Assam jail after his lawyer claims he'll contest Lok Sabha poll from Punjab’s Khadoor Sahib

Couldn't talk due to strictness of jail authorities: Amritpal's family after meeting him in jail

Their visit comes a day after Singh's legal counsel Rajdev S...

Centre grants 'Y' category security cover to Phillaur MLA Vikramjit Chaudhary among 3 Punjab Congress rebels

Centre grants 'Y' category security to Phillaur MLA Vikramjit Chaudhary and 2 other Punjab Congress rebels

The Central Reserve Police Force has been directed by the Mi...

First Sikh court opens in UK to deal with family disputes: Report

First Sikh court opens in UK to deal with family disputes

According to ‘The Times’, the Sikh court was launched last w...


Cities

View All