40 more women officers set to get Colonel rank

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40 more women officers set to get Colonel rank Blog Image

What’s in today’s article?

  • Why in news?
  • Participation of Women in Defence Sector

 

Why in news?

  • Around 40 more women Army officers are set to be cleared for the rank of colonel (selection grade) in phases over the next two to three years.
    • A total of 108 women officers, out of 244, were cleared for the rank of colonels by a special selection board in January 2023.
    • They have already assumed command roles in various Army units across the country.
  • This move will make them eligible to command units in their respective arms and services in the future.
    • The SC order to grant permanent commission to women Army officers in Feb 2020 opened the doors for their promotion across all streams of the Army, except pure combat arms.


 

Participation of Women in Defence Sector

Image caption: Percentage of women in armed forces

  • Navy
    • The induction of women as officers in the Indian Navy commenced in the year 1991.  
    • Since then, the Indian Navy has gradually opened all branches to women officers including induction through NDA. 
      • In Navy, women are engaged in activities such as firing torpedoes and missiles at enemy warships. 
      • Women officers also serve on board naval warships in combat, albeit discharging non-combat roles.
    • In 2020, the Indian Navy started deploying its first batch of women pilots on the Dornier maritime aircraft. 
    • Further, for the first time, women are also being recruited for sailors’ entries under the Agnipath Scheme w.e.f. 2022.
      • 20% vacancies are reserved for women.
  • Air Force
    • Officers recruitment in the IAF is gender neutral. Women officers are inducted in all the branches and streams of IAF.
    • In 2015, Indian Air Force had opened new combat roles for women as fighter pilots. 
    • This experimental scheme to induct women officers in all combat roles has now been regularised into a permanent scheme.
  • Army
    • Initially, woman officers were permitted PC in only two services – the Judge Advocate General’s Branch and the Army Education Corps. 
    • In February 2020, the defence ministry permitted SSC women officers in another eight arms/services to be granted PC.
      • This happened after the Supreme Court, in February 2020, granted women the right to permanent commission (PC), and the right to command.
    • Hence, at present, the women are being commissioned in Indian Army in ten Streams.
    • Now the prestigious National Defence Academy (NDA) has started accepting women cadets.
      • In 2021, the Supreme Court allowed women to appear for the upcoming entrance exam of the National Defence Academy (NDA).
    • So far, no combat role has been given to women in Army.
      • The ‘no women in combat’ rule was not challenged in the SC and the apex court did not rule on this.
  • Recent developments in Army
    • For the first time, five women officers have cleared the prestigious Defence Services Staff Course (DSSC) and Defence Services Technical Staff Course (DSTSC) Exam.
    • Recently, a women officer has been deployed, for the first time, to a post in the Saichen Glacier.
    • The Army has so far recruited six meritorious sportswomen into the Corps of Military Police under its Mission Olympic Programme.
      • The Indian Army was the first among the three Services to open its soldier ranks to women in the Corps of Military Police.
    • In January 2023, Indian Army deployed its largest-ever contingent of women soldiers for UN peacekeeping operations in the volatile oil-rich Abyei region of Africa.
      • This is India’s largest single unit of women peacekeepers in a UN Mission.

 


Q1) When did the armed forces begin inducting women?

 The army, air force and navy began inducting women as short-service commission (SSC) officers in 1992. This was the first time women were allowed to join the military outside the medical stream. Initially, they could serve for five years, and their service could be extended by another five years. In 2006, a policy revision allowed them to serve for a maximum of 14 years as SSC officers.

 

Q2) What does Permanent Commission in Indian Armed Forces mean?

In the Indian Armed Forces, Permanent Commission refers to a career in which a serving officer can continue to serve until their retirement age, which is typically between 54 and 60 years of age, depending on the rank. A Permanent Commission is granted to officers who are selected through a rigorous selection process and who meet the required physical and educational criteria.

 


Source: After 108 women officers, 40 more set to get Colonel rank | PIB | Outlook