City
Epaper

'Hear us before taking any decision', Centre to SC on pleas against Agnipath scheme

By IANS | Updated: June 21, 2022 13:40 IST

New Delhi, June 21 The Central government has filed a caveat in the Supreme Court regarding the petitions ...

Open in App

New Delhi, June 21 The Central government has filed a caveat in the Supreme Court regarding the petitions in connection with the 'Agnipath' scheme, to induct youth into all three-armed forces divisions, saying the court should hear it before taking any decision.

Three petitions have been filed so far in the apex court in connection with the Agnipath scheme. However, the caveat did not cite any particular plea.

A plea filed by advocate M.L. Sharma sought a direction from the top court to quash the notification issued on June 14 by the Ministry of Defence announcing the scheme.

The plea said a large section of youth have started protesting against the scheme in various parts of the country.

The plea said: "According to the impugned press note...dated 14.06.2022 after 4 years out of 100 per cent selected candidates for Permanent Commission in Indian Army 25 per cent will be continued in Indian Army force and the rest 75 per cent will be retired /denied jobs in the Indian Army. During 4 years they will be paid salary and perks, but after 4 years denied candidates will get no pension, etc."

Sharma's plea said the Central government, contrary to the constitutional provisions and without having approval from Parliament and without any gazette notification, quashed the century-old army selection process and imposed the scheme on the country.

Another plea was filed by advocate Vishal Tiwari, last week, seeking a direction to set up a committee to examine the scheme and its impact on national security and the Army. On Tuesday, a plea was mentioned before the Supreme Court seeking a probe by a special investigation team (SIT) into the violent protests against the scheme.

A bench of Justices C.T. Ravikumar and Sudhanshu Dhulia directed that the matter be placed before Chief Justice N.V. Ramana to examine the request for early listing.

After the Central government announced the scheme, protests broke out in several parts of the country. According to the scheme, candidates between 17.5 - 21 years will be recruited in the armed forces for a four-year period. However, after the protests broke out, the Central government increased the upper age limit to 23 years for recruitment in 2022.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: Vishal tiwariMinistry Of DefenceSupreme CourtPrawit wongsuwonUnion ministry of defenceIndian ministry of defenceDefence civilianNational defence ministryUnion defence ministryUk ministry of defenceUk defence ministry
Open in App

Related Stories

BusinessVodafone Idea Shares Rise by 4%, Investors Cheer as Stock Surges 22% Over Six Months

NationalGreen Firecrackers With QR Codes Allowed for Offline Sale During Diwali in Delhi-NCR, Says Supreme Court

NationalKarur Stampede: Supreme Court Orders CBI Probe, Justice Ajay Rastogi to Head Investigation

MaharashtraShiv Sena Symbol Case: Supreme Court Postpones Final Hearing to November 12

National'Sanatan Ka Apman Nahi Sahenge': Supreme Court Lawyer Tries To Attack CJI BR Gavai

National Realted Stories

NationalKerala Pradesh Congress forms new committee with 13 VPs, 58 general secretaries

NationalBJP slams Congress on Nishikant Dubey row, says complainant skipped Lokpal hearing

NationalNepal moves to facilitate construction of two Nepal–India cross-border power lines

NationalSiddaramaiah trying to project Priyank Kharge as his successor to CM post: K'taka BJP

NationalKarnataka govt targeting RSS to hide failures: Pralhad Joshi