first of all take out ur personal rants somewhere else,just because u dont support what is said does not make u ethically more powerful to rant like that,the fuk I can also do the same
Your reaction is surprising; there was no personal rant in anything I wrote. Are you reading the same thing, or imagining things?
U think so and what made u think like so,it is not a disturbed area,what is ur definition of disturbed area
Very simple.
The government of the province, or the national government alone, have the authority to declare a particular, notified area a disturbed area. This has to be a public notification, gazetted and officially promulgated. There is no question of Alex Mercer or Joe Shearer thinking this or that or the other area is disturbed, but a technical definition and declaration under the Indian Constitution.
It is only in such an area that at the invitation of a magistrate, empower to do so under the law, that the Army can intervene. The Army CANNOT on its own authority outside a disturbed area take any action on its own. It lacks any constitutional authority to do anything without a notification.
It is only in a disturbed area handed over to the Army for peace-keeping, one step further from allowing flag marches, that allow the application of the Armed Forces Special Powers Act. There are specific areas notified for the application of this act; J&K is one, Manipur, Nagaland, I think (not sure), Mizoram is another.
This is from the Times Of India, Kolkata edition, December 14, 2010, Page 9:
ARMY TO SECURE KEY BASTAR AXIS
by Supriya Sharma, TNN
Raipur:
Since the Maoists ambushed and killed more than hundred CRPF men in Bastar this summer - incidentally, one of the ambushes took place close to the proposed training range - an intense debate has raged over whether at all the Army should be drawn into anti-Maoist operations. The Army itself has shown great reluctance to being drawn into another insurgency battle but sources indicated it has begun mapping the contours of the conflict, preparing itself for the eventuality of deployment, in case the Government decides to declare Maoist-affected territories as disturbed areas, like parts of the north-east or Jammu and Kashmir.
Sources in the security establishment said a training facility in Bastar would necessitate logistical support. "This means the Army would first secure the Kondagaon-Narayanpur axis, placing a large number of troops in a series of camps, before it moves inwards for the purpose of training, somewhere near the Orcha in the foothills of Abujhmad," said a senior officer. Whether strategic or routine, the Army' move into Bastar would be significant, pointed out a retired Army officer. "Look at this in the light of psychological warfare. It is like telling the Maoists, beware, the tiger is outside your den."
It is to be hoped that you will get the point.
I suggest you study the laws carefully before writing and reading whatever you wish to write and read, rather than taking the easy way out of accusing others of personal rants.
the area is a hot traffic zone of narcotics business,and sometimes also claimed as the crossing point of maoist rebels to the neighboring countries,though i dont accept it.
There are claims like that for a number of other areas, for instance, Nepal itself, via Bihar towns and villages on the border. The Maoists are active in Bihar and in those border areas. That does not call for Army patrolling, and in fact, there is no Army patrolling. Parts of the India-Nepal border are not even under the border forces, even though there is a special-purpose border force constituted for this border, distinct from the BSF.
The main significance of the Army is the presence of XXXIII Corps HQ at Siliguri, er, "nested" happily right in the middle of the Chicken's Neck.
Incidentally, these terms were first used by our Pakistani friends, who keep looking at us and our country in terms of a very large bird. This is not the only Chicken's Neck that they identified; the other was the target of armoured attacks by them, one, in 65, under Akhtar Husain Mallik, Div. Cdr. 12th Div., unsuccessful because of a bewildering mid-battle swop of commanders by the Chief of Staff, Musa Khan, who literally helicoptered Yahya Khan in and took the other general out; the second, in 71, under an authentic military genius, unfortunately on the Pakistani side, Maj. General Eftekhar. Eftekhar's attacks actually penetrated Indian defences; if he had not been a battlefield casualty, I shudder to think of what might have happened. Fortunately, in today's Pakistan, he would have been slaughtered in a mosque before ever he got to battle; he was an Ahmadiya, as, coincidentally, was Akhtar Husain Mallik.
I think it was Truman who exclaimed against a similar description - or was it Churchil? -
"Some chicken! Some neck!"
like i said earlier the area is under heavy patrol of multiple forces,and if u urself r not sure about the role of IAF dont bother to tell me what is present on this forum or not,because i dont consider this the forum as the official source of IAF,and finally what u concern is not anything to bother for me
Nothing but the West Bengal Police and the BSF. Check your facts, don't just name organisations that come to your mind.
Just in case you didn't get it the first time, the Army is not patrolling the Chicken's Neck, because it has no authority nor the permission to do so; the Assam Rifles does not operate in India outside the north-east, except on rare occasions, and it does not operate in West Bengal; there is no Air Force patrolling of ground areas within India, although there are radar surveillance formations deployed in two concentric layers; these are mainly in the west, and the defences against the north are just being built.
Finally, regarding the IAF, all that matters is what others have reproduced in their maps, especially the maps at the beginning of this thread. There is nothing that I wish to add to this. There is nothing that anybody else who is Indian needs to add to this.
I hope that sets your misconceptions and exaggerations at rest.