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59 Trainee CoBRA Commandos Give Their Commander The Slip To 'Go Home' En Masse

CRPF has ordered a probe.
BCCL

NEW DELHI -- In an unusual case of 'mass bunking' being confronted by the CRPF, 59 trainee commandos of its elite jungle warfare and counter-Naxal squad CoBRA have gone missing from a train just before they were to report for duty in the Left Wing Extremism-hit theatre of Bihar as part of their first deployment.

The incident occurred yesterday at the Mughalsarai Station when the commandos, on way from their training centre in Jammu and Kashmir's Srinagar after their 5-week basic training, apparently decided to abandon their forward journey and leave en masse to go to their homes or some undisclosed location.

Officials said the jawans also did not inform their contingent commander on board the train as they made their daring escape bid in the night.

Shocked by the utter disregard to rules by these constable-rank jawans recruited in the country's largest paramilitary in 2011, the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) has ordered for a Court of Inquiry into the incident, termed as a case of "unauthorised absence" by the force.

Senior officials of the Commando Battalion for Resolute Action (CoBRA) and CRPF said the jawans were scheduled to report at the headquarters of the 205th CoBRA unit in Gaya in Bihar today for their onward deployment for conducting special anti-Naxal operations in Bihar.

"A full Inquiry has been ordered by the force headquarters in Delhi. The trainers and the havildar who was accompanying these commandos have got in touch with some of those who vanished from the train without informing seniors. Some have promised to report by tomorrow," senior officials told PTI.

It is to be ascertained as to how all of the men decided to make the slip en masse, they said, adding the jawans were "not armed".

They added that maximum of the commandos who undertook this 'mass bunk' hail from the states of Uttar Pradesh and Bihar.

The CoBRA was raised in 2009 by the central government under CRPF to act as a special guerrilla combat wing for tackling violence perpetrated by naxalites as well as insurgents in the northeast with the aid of specific intelligence inputs.

Later, in a statement, the CRPF said that the commandos on their own decided to visit their home without prior permission as they had reached early as per their scheduled programme.

"Since they (59 commandos) were early as per their scheduled programme, they decided on their own to avail Saturday and Sunday to visit their home without prior permission from competent authority.

"These personnel have committed a misconduct for which they will be dealt with as per departmental rules," it said.

Slamming the opposition for their criticism of the demonetisation move, Modi said that his government was always ready for a debate on the subject but the opposition was too busy giving bytes to the media.

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This article exists as part of the online archive for HuffPost India, which closed in 2020. Some features are no longer enabled. If you have questions or concerns about this article, please contact indiasupport@huffpost.com.