Navdeep Singh (Ashoka Chakra) Explained

Honorific Prefix:Lieutenant
Navdeep Singh
Honorific Suffix:AC
Birth Name:Navdeep Singh
Birth Date:8 June 1985
Birth Place:Gurdaspur, Punjab
Death Place:KIA in Jammu & Kashmir
Allegiance: India
Serviceyears:2011
Rank: Lieutenant
Awards: Ashoka Chakra
Unit:Army Ordnance Corps
Maratha Light Infantry
Alma Mater:Officers Training Academy, Chennai (M.Sc)
Army Institute of Management, Kolkata (M.B.A.)
Institute of Hotel Management, Gurdaspur (B.Sc.)
Battles:Jammu and Kashmir Insurgency

Lieutenant Navdeep Singh, AC was a Ghatak Platoon Commander of 15 Maratha Light Infantry regiment in the Indian Army.[1]

He led an operation to ambush 17 well-trained and armed terrorists who infiltrated into Jammu and Kashmir state. He killed 4 of the terrorists and brought an injured team member to safety before succumbing to fatal injury from close range. He was posthumously conferred the highest peacetime gallantry award of India Ashoka Chakra by President of India on the 63rd Republic Day.[2]

Early life and education

Born in Gurdaspur, Singh was a third-generation soldier to serve in the Indian Army. His grandfather was a junior commissioned officer while his father Joginder Singh served as Subedar-major in the Bengal Sappers for 30 years and retired as Honorary Captain. He completed his schooling from Army Public School, Tibri and completed his graduation in B.Sc. in hotel management in 2006 from IHM-Gurdaspur and post-graduation in the Army Institute of Management, Kolkata in 2009, where he received his MBA degree.

Military career

Singh shunned a corporate career and instead joined the Officers Training Academy as a gentleman cadet. He was commissioned into the Army Ordnance Corps, on 19 March 2011.[3] As is the custom for all the non-fighting arms of the Indian Army, officers must complete an attachment of two years with an infantry battalion in a war or counter-insurgency theatre. For the duration of these two years, the officer, for all practical purposes, belongs to the said infantry battalion.[4] Lieutenant Singh was attached to the 15 Maratha Light Infantry in Jammu & Kashmir in his first posting as a commissioned officer.[5]

Ambush

On 20 August 2011, Singh planned and led the operation to kill or capture 17 armed terrorists in Gurez Sector of northern Kashmir. He set up an ambush for terrorists and ordered the team to not open the fire before he do.After waiting till terrorists were just meters away, he cornered the infiltrators before attack.[6] [5] [7] [8] He had positioned himself in least cover point and his team behind boulders, before attacking. He shot dead three terrorists when he was wounded in the head from about five meters' distance while trying to pull an injured soldier to safety. He nevertheless killed the fourth terrorist. He managed to pull his comrade-in-arms to safety and kept firing till death.[1] [9]

The encounter lasted about 8 minutes in which 12 well-trained terrorists were killed. His body taken to a hospital in Srinagar.[5]

Honors

Singh's body was brought to his hometown Gurdaspur the next day wrapped in the Indian flag in a military convoy. Mourners included people of his hometown, personnel from civil and army officers and soldiers from his regiment who gave him a guard of honor and the final salute. A state cabinet minister representing the chief minister laid a wreath on his body. He was cremated with full state and army honors amid crowd showering flowers and chanting "Navdeep Singh amar rahe".[5] [10]

He was awarded the Ashoka Chakra posthumously on the 63rd Republic Day by president of India Pratibha Patil.[5] [9]

In popular culture

Notes and References

  1. http://pib.nic.in/newsite/erelease.aspx?relid=79890 President to Confer Ashoka Chakra on Lt. Navdeep Singh (Posthumous)
  2. http://www.tribuneindia.com/2012/20120126/jaltrib.htm Ashok Chakra to Lt Navdeep Singh posthumously
  3. News: Part I-Section 4: Ministry of Defence (Army Branch) . 2311 . 31 December 2011. The Gazette of India.
  4. Web site: Army must revisit skewed policies . The Statesman . 19 September 2017.
  5. http://www.rediff.com/news/slide-show/slide-show-1-to-all-the-mothers-who-lost-their-sons-to-india/20120412.htm To all the mothers who lost their sons for India
  6. http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/article2832285.ece Navdeep Singh to be decorated with Ashok Chakra posthumously
  7. https://archive.today/20130103185905/http://articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2011-08-23/india/29917936_1_cremation-ground-infiltration-indian-army Lt Navdeep Singh cremated with full honours
  8. https://web.archive.org/web/20120128013753/http://ibnlive.in.com/news/lt-navdeep-singh-awarded-ashok-chakra/224317-3.html Young Army officer gets Ashok Chakra posthumously
  9. http://www.odishatoday.com/viewnews.php?news_id=2475 Tears as Lieutenant Navdeep Singh gets posthumous Ashok Chakra for supreme sacrifice
  10. https://archive.today/20130103185905/http://articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2011-08-23/india/29917936_1_cremation-ground-infiltration-indian-army Lt Navdeep Singh cremated with full honors
  11. Book: Aroor, Shiv. India's most fearless : more military stories of unimaginable courage and sacrifice. 2. Penguin’s Ebury Publishing. Rahul Singh. 2018. 978-0-14-344315-5. Gurgaon, Haryana, India. 36–50. Fire When You Can See Their Faces. 1107345859.