Over 500 Indian troops have HIV: Chief of force

By Subir Bhaumik
BBC News, Calcutta

More than 500 soldiers belonging to an elite paramilitary force in India are infected with HIV, the chief of the force has said.

Seventy troops of the 173-year-old Assam Rifles have died of the infection in the past 10 years, according to Lieutenant General Karan Singh Yadava.
Many of the Assam Rifles troops are posted in north-eastern India and are engaged in fighting local insurgencies.
India has one of the highest numbers of people with HIV in the world.
Lt Gen Yadava said the force is organising sex education lessons for troops.
“We have asked our men to curb the menace (of HIV infections) with full strength,” he said. **
The Assam Rifles are recruited and deployed in the north-east of India - where they help maintain security or quell insurgencies in states such Manipur, Mizoram and Nagaland.
They are posted in areas close to the Burmese border which have some of the highest rates of HIV infection in India.
**
Abuses

Analysts say the easy availability of narcotics from Burma - and the local tendency to inject them through the multiple use of syringes - is the main cause for such high prevalence of Aids.

But they say members of the Assam Rifles mainly get infected through unprotected sex rather than through drugs use.
Assam Rifles troops have, in recent years, been accused of forcing local women into having sex with them.
In 1987, the force launched Operation Bluebird in the Oinam area of Manipur after Naga separatists looted more than 100 weapons from their camp.
Human rights groups in the north-east allege that at that time, a large number of rapes were reported and some pregnant women were even forced to give birth in the open.
In 1989, an Assam Rifles patrol was found guilty of gang-raping a number of tribal women in a remote hamlet in the state of Tripura.
In 2004, they were accused of raping and killing a girl in Manipur.
The US-based Human Rights Watch said in a recent report that some of the guilty troops were being shielded, though the case is still going on.
The Assam Rifles was raised 173 years ago as a specialist force by the British during their campaigns against fiercely-independent tribal chiefs in the north-east.
Post-colonial India expanded the force to its current strength of 46 battalions - with about 1,000 men in each battalion - as rebel groups proliferated across the troubled north-east.

BBC NEWS | World | South Asia | ‘Over 500’ Indian troops have HIV

It does not look good for an Elite force…

Hopefully with the light shed, spread of HIV will be curbed within the force, and then the country as a whole. This menace (HIV) has plagued many societies including the developed nations.

Re: Over 500 Indian troops have HIV: Chief of force

LOL... I've never seen the words "elite" and "paramilitary" next to each other. There is nothing terribly elite about the Assam Rifles.

Light heartedness aside, this article does draw attention to the danger that AIDS poses to societies with growing drug addiction... which includes Pakistan.

Re: Over 500 Indian troops have HIV: Chief of force

ISI?

Re: Over 500 Indian troops have HIV: Chief of force

7 a year ?? Whats the score in Pak!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Come on man now dont say that it results in 210 death original 70, plus their extra marital counterparts, and their wives and few more.

Not bad so many Indians killed without even firing a bullet. Even beats Kargil mis adventure.

You might have missed, but the report is by an Indian and not by a Pakistani so dont get too hot under the collar. Go and ask him what the total collateral damage was 210 or 2000.

**

Such are powers of ISI :smooth: