Tag Archive for: BSF

Sadguru replaces Ramdev as BSF wants no business

Jaggi Vasudev – Ramdev

 

 


Over the last two years, the yoga quest of India’s armed forces appears to have changed direction. Apart from the BSF, the Isha Foundation is now imparting yoga training to CRPF, CISF, Coast Guard and the Army.


TWO YEARS ago, a BSF contingent trained by Baba Ramdev was adjudged the best group by the Ministry of Ayush at an event on June 21 to mark the second International Yoga Day. Soon, the force replaced its traditional PT routine with yoga and sent its troops to Ramdev’s Patanjali Yogpeeth in Haridwar for training. By early 2017, Ramdev opened a Patanjali store at the BSF Headquarters in the National Capital.

A year later, the BSF team topped the event once again. But this time, the trainers were from Sadhguru Jaggi Vasudev’s Isha Foundation. Last Thursday, too, the BSF teamed up with Isha Foundation for the latest edition of yoga day.

Over the last two years, the yoga quest of India’s armed forces appears to have changed direction.

Apart from the BSF, the Isha Foundation is now imparting yoga training to CRPF, CISF, Coast Guard and the Army. So much so, Jaggi Vasudev personally trained and practiced yoga with 250 Armymen at the Siachen Base camp this International Yoga Day.When contacted by The Indian Express, BSF DG K K Sharma said Baba Ramdev had trained 4,000 personnel since 2016 but the force does not utilise his services now.

“We have no association with Baba Ramdev anymore. He was the first to contact us and used to hold sessions with our field units earlier. We got our first batch trained by him at Patanjali Yogpeeth. We have no exclusive contract with anyone, that I will only do with Baba Ramdev. Later, many other people contacted us saying they offer ‘such and such’ services. Sadhguru’s system is also a type of yoga. There is a capsule course of Sadhguru, related to pranayam and meditation, that our officers avail of,” Sharma said.

Baba Ramdev and Patanjali Yogpeeth did not respond to a questionnaire sent to the organisation’s official spokesperson. The organisation did not respond to calls and text messages from The Indian Express seeking comment.

According to Isha Foundation, its association with the BSF began in 2017. “During a conversation with BSF senior officials in June 2017, Sadhguru offered to create a special training module for the security forces, which would empower and equip soldiers to better handle the strain of serving in some of the most challenging situations. The sessions for BSF personnel began after this,” an Isha Foundation spokesperson said.

According to the Foundation, various forces, including the BSF, are offered processes such as Upa-Yoga and Angamardana, which will complement and support their physical training, and Surya Kriya and Hatha Yoga, which will create balance and stability on the physical, mental, emotional and energy level.

“Three ‘Train the Trainer’ sessions for about 300 BSF personnel have been conducted. One Inner Engineering programme has been conducted for senior BSF personnel. BSF also nominates some of its personnel for ongoing Inner Engineering programmes,” the spokesperson said.

All of it, says the Foundation, is for free. BSF DG Sharma, however, said the force pays “a nominal fee, which is much lower than what others are charged” to meet expenses related to stay of trainees and trainers and other facilities.

While the Isha Foundation claims to have “specially designed modules for soldiers”, Sharma says his forces “consider all very good”.

Apart from the Isha Foundation, the BSF is also training with Swami Vivekananda Yoga Anusandhana Samsthana (S-Vyasa) in Bengaluru. They offer disease-centric yoga practices, Sharma said.

“It is not possible for any one single entity to service such a huge force. Both Ramdev and Sadhguru have different styles. One focuses on purely physical aspect and pranayam of yoga. Jaggi has a different clientele. He speaks English. He focuses on Rajyoga, managing yourself mentally. What he calls inner engineering,” said Sharma.

Jaggi Vasudev, incidentally, has been increasingly supportive of the ruling establishment over the last two years, including on contentious issues such as demonetisation and the national anthem.

NSG seek permission to support forces to counter terrorism in J&K

Some of the NSG units to be deployed in J&K would be placed at a BSF facility in Srinagar while more locations are being scouted, said Jammu and Kashmir police sources.

“As is the case when a force is brought into a new theatre, modalities will be discussed with the J&K administration, police and other security agencies,” a senior NSG officer told TOI.

A proper infrastructure is being put in place for NSG ahead of its teams moving in. The force will train CRPF and J&K police in entering and storming buildings and other anti-terror skills. “As and when terror situations demanding their special skills crop up, NSG commandos will be also be deployed for operations. The call will be taken by J&K police at whose disposal the force will be,” said an officer.

NSG commandos use sophisticated Heckler and Koch MP5 submachine guns, sniper rifles, through-the-wall radar and C-4 explosives to eliminate holed-up terrorists.

The “Ramzan ceasefire”, while providing relief to ordinary people, put counter-terror forces at a disadvantage by easing pressure that intensified operations in preceding months had built on terrorists. According to a senior J&K police officer, had the unilateral ceasefire not been in place and cordon-and-search operations continued in the normal course, around 15-20 terrorists could have been neutralised based on intelligence flow on their movements in built-up areas.

Ramzan Ceasefire

“The truce allowed terrorists freedom of movement in residential areas, let them renew supplies, recruit locals, mobilise overground workers and scout for new hideouts and bases,” said an officer. There is concern that terror groups may now strike with renewed vigour, particularly targeting the Amarnath Yatra, and hence the strategy will be focused on neutralising terrorists active in the south Kashmir areas of Shopian, Pulwama, Anantnag and Kulgam.
Intelligence inputs warn of multiple threats to the yatra, particularly from the Jaish-e-Mohammed, which was most active during the truce, Lashkar-e-Taiba and Hizbul Mujahideen. Terror modules comprising Pakistani nationals are expectedly planning to infiltrate from across the border and LoC to stage attacks.