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Rahul to take up one rank, one pension issue

The UPA-2 government may give in to a long-standing demand of soldiers for one rank, one pension (OROP), with Congress vice-president Rahul Gandhi firmly backing the proposal and raising the hopes of around 3 million defence pensioners.

Updated on: Feb 15, 2014, 15:44:23 IST
Hindustan Times | By , NEW DELHI
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The UPA-2 government may give in to a long-standing demand of soldiers for one rank, one pension (OROP), with Congress vice-president Rahul Gandhi firmly backing the proposal and raising the hopes of around 3 million defence pensioners.

HT Image
HT Image


Gandhi met several ex-servicemen delegations on Friday and told them he was sensitive to their demand and would take it up with the government forcefully. Hindustan Times was first to report that he was pushing hard to get the OROP implemented. It is learnt Gandhi may raise the issue with the PM soon.

"I am on your side. I will do all that I can to see that your demands are met," Gandhi told the veterans.

The OROP will ensure that soldiers of the same rank and the same length of service receive the same pension, irrespective of their retirement date. "It should be effective from 2006, the year the 6th pay panel report was implemented," said 85-year-old Brig SP Sibal (retd), who turned up for the meeting after reading the HT report on Gandhi reaching out to the veterans.

Gandhi's interventions have produced results, be it raising the cap on LPG cylinders from nine to 12 or junking a controversial ordinance shielding convicted lawmakers.

All pre-2006 retirees receive lesser pension than not only their counterparts but also their juniors. A major general who retired in 1995 draws a basic pension of Rs 30,350, but a colonel who retired after 2006 gets Rs 34,000.

Successive governments have made assurances to remove disparities, but none have put their money where their mouth is. Implementation of the pension scheme is estimated to cost Rs 2,000 crore every year.

"It's a step in the right direction, though belated. The PM should make a statement in Parliament on implementing the OROP," said Major General Satbir Singh (retd).

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