PM Modi celebrates Diwali with soldiers near India-China border
Tribune News Service
Uttarkashi (Uttarakhand), November 7
Dressed in heavy mountain gear, Prime Minister Narendra Modi celebrated Diwali with Army and ITBP personnel in the icy terrain near the India-China border, saying their devotion to duty in the remote icy heights is enabling the strength of the nation.
Greeting the jawans in the Harshil cantonment area, the prime minister said they, through their commitment and discipline, are securing the future and the dreams of 125 crore Indians and helping spread a sense of security and fearlessness among the people.
The Prime Minister remained with troops for about an-hour-and-a-half.
The Prime Minister recalled that he has been visiting soldiers on Diwali ever since he was the chief minister of Gujarat. PM Modi said he still remembers his Kailash Mansarovar Yatra long back and that how ITBP jawans helped him and other pilgrims in the pilgrimage.
He extended Diwali wishes to the jawans and their families and offered sweets to the personnel.
Modi said India is taking great strides forward in the defence sector. He spoke of various measures being taken for the welfare of ex-servicemen, including implementation of 'one rank, one pension' (OROP).
Modi said the Indian Armed Forces draw admiration and appreciation across the world, in UN peacekeeping operations.
He also interacted with people from nearby areas who had gathered to greet him on Diwali. PM Modi landed at Harshil at 7.50 am and left at 9.10 am.
The PM said the country is taking great strides forward in the defence sector. He spoke of various measures being taken for the welfare of ex-servicemen, including implementation of 'one rank, one pension' (OROP).
Modi said the Indian Armed Forces draw admiration and appreciation across the world, in UN peacekeeping operations.
The Prime Minister offered sweets to the jawans. He also interacted with people from nearby areas who had gathered to greet him on Diwali.
Harshil is a cantonment area situated at a height of 7,860 feet close to the India-China border in Uttarkashi district.
The Prime Minister later reached Kedarnath to offer prayers and review the progress of reconstruction projects at Kedarpuri.
Kedarpuri, the township situated close to the Himalayan shrine, had bore the brunt of the catastrophic floods of 2013, which killed thousands of people.
A statement from the Prime Minister's Office said Modi extensively walked around the entire temple complex, where significant reconstruction works are in progress. He was briefed by senior officials about the progress of the works. He interacted briefly with several people present at the temple complex.
The Kedarnath Temple complex is currently the focus of a major development and reconstruction effort, following the severe flood and landslide in 2013.
The last time the Prime Minister had been to Kedarnath was in October 2017, just before the portals of the Himalayan shrine close for the winters.
After becoming the prime minister in 2014, Modi had spent his Diwali at Siachen with jawans.
In 2015, he had visited the Punjab border on Diwali. His visit coincided with 50 years of the 1965 Indo-Pak war.
The next year, Modi was in Himachal Pradesh where he spent time with Indo-Tibetan Border Police personnel at an outpost.
Modi had spent his fourth Diwali as prime minister with soldiers in Gurez in Jammu and Kashmir last year. — With PTI inputs