Centre must extend retirement age of ‘Agniveers’ to 65 years: Mamata Banerjee
Press Trust of India | June 27, 2022 | 05:42 PM IST | 1 min read
West Bengal CM Mamata Banerjee said the BJP-led central government launched the Agnipath scheme keeping in mind the 2024 Lok Sabha polls.
BURDWAN: West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee on Monday urged the Centre to extend the retirement age of soldiers recruited under the Agnipath scheme to 65 years, contending that they will stare at an uncertain future at the end of the four-year term. Banerjee also said the BJP-led central government launched the new defence recruitment scheme keeping in mind the 2024 Lok Sabha polls.
"My motto is to create more and more jobs unlike the BJP. They are training people for four months and recruiting them for four years. What will these soldiers do after four years? What will be their fate? It’s uncertain. “We demand that the retirement age be extended to 65 years (under the Agnipath scheme)," Banerjee said at an event here.
Also Read | ‘What does Rs 200 crore mean?’: Punjabi University asks government on budget announcement
It envisages recruiting in the armed forces youths in the age bracket of 17-and-half to 21 years for only four years, with a provision to retain 25 per cent of them for 15 more years. For 2022, the upper age limit has been extended to 23 years. Banerjee had earlier claimed that the BJP was using the scheme to build its own “armed cadre base”.
Follow us for the latest education news on colleges and universities, admission, courses, exams, research, education policies, study abroad and more..
To get in touch, write to us at news@careers360.com.
Next Story
]Featured News
]- GCAS ‘complicated, causes delays’; students, colleges want reforms in Gujarat Common Admission Services
- CMRIT Bangalore principal: Civil, mechanical engineers migrating to IT – we are building the bridges back
- VIT Vellore professor lectures in 7 languages at once to help BTech students with complex topics; here’s how
- CISCE schools can continue to teach foreign languages as 3rd option: Board secretary
- ‘Fix schools, create jobs’: West Bengal voters cut through election noise with education, employment demands
- BBAU Lucknow student’s death sparks protests against hostel food, curfew; proctor denies link
- Fees to social media-use: What NCAHP’s first ethics code for allied, healthcare professionals says
- NMC junks 150-seat MBBS cap, population rule; sets 10 km limit for medical college-hospital distance
- Suicides, opaque placements, caste: IIT Bombay, Kanpur’s student journals dare to ask the tough questions
- ‘Not just academic, but personal’: NSUT Delhi takes AI beyond BTech, across non-engineering courses