Indian army officials offer floral tributes to the portrait of military chief, Gen. Bipin Rawat at an army base in Srinagar. (Photo | AP)
Indian army officials offer floral tributes to the portrait of military chief, Gen. Bipin Rawat at an army base in Srinagar. (Photo | AP)

CDS Rawat and Brigadier Lidder cremated; IAF warns against 'uninformed' speculations

General Rawat was cremated with full military honours with a 17-gun salute. After the ytri-services bugles played Last Post and Rouse, the funeral pyre was lit by his two daughters.

NEW DELHI: On a day the nation bid farewell to General Bipin Rawat, his wife and Brigadier LS Lidder, the Indian Air Force called for avoiding ‘uninformed’ speculation on the chopper crash that claimed 13 lives.

General Rawat was cremated with full military honours with a 17-gun salute. After the ytri-services bugles played Last Post and Rouse, the funeral pyre was lit by his two daughters.

Gun salute is a formal way to honour a dignitary and it varies as per the individual’s position and rank in the hierarchy.

A 21-gun salute, the highest, is for heads of state and government. The number decreases with the rank of the recipient.

In the morning, six officers (two each from Army, Navy & Air Force) of the rank equivalent of Lieutenant General were the national flag bearers.

Wreaths were laid by dignitaries while the mortal remains were laid at the CDS’s official residence at Kamraj Marg.

From his residence to the Brar Square Ceremonial, the battery of 2233 Field Regiment provided a gun carriage.

As many as 99 personnel from the Army, Navy and Air Force and 33 members of the tri-services band formed the front escort, while 99 more from all ranks from the three services acted as the rear escort. A total of 800 service personnel were in attendance for the funeral of India’s first CDS.

Apart from Home Minister Amit Shah, Defence Minister Rajnath Singh and National Security Advisor Ajit Doval, senior military officers from Sri Lanka, Bhutan, Nepal and Bangladesh were present.

“Gen Rawat was the epitome of bravery and courage. It was very unfortunate to lose him so early. His commitment towards the motherland will forever remain in our memories,” tweeted Shah.

In a statement, the IAF said the inquiry into the chopper crash would be completed expeditiously and facts will be brought out.

“IAF has constituted a tri-service Court of Inquiry to investigate the cause of the tragic helicopter accident. The inquiry would be completed expeditiously. Till then, to respect the dignity of the deceased, uninformed speculation may be avoided,” the IAF said in a statement.

This came amid speculation by a certain section on the reasons of the crash.

Meanwhile, ashes of Rawat and his wife, who were given a final send-off with full military honours in Delhi this evening, will be taken to Haridwar on Saturday, their family said.

The mortal remains of General Rawat and Madhulika Rawat were consigned to flames at the Brar Square crematorium in Delhi Cantonment, two days after they and 11 others, all from the armed forces, were killed in a helicopter crash in Coonoor in Tamil Nadu.

As millions watched on television and hundreds packed into Brar Square, the couple's daughters Tarini and Kritika conducted the last rites of their parents taken away from them so brutally.

General Rawat's mortal remains were taken to the funeral site in a solemn procession from his official residence -- 3, Kamraj Marg, on a ceremonial gun carriage, which was bedecked with flowers.

Along the way, several people waved tricolours, many ran along the carriage, chanting patriotic slogans, and cries of 'amar rahe' for the Rawats.

Tarini, along with her elder sister Kritika, on Friday afternoon performed traditional rituals at their home, aided by a priest, before the mortal remains of their parents were moved to carriages for taking them to the crematorium.

"After the cremation today at Delhi Cantonment's crematorium, we will be taking his 'asthi' (ashes) to Haridwar tomorrow," Tarini, told PTI, moments before the carriage left General Rawat's official residence.

Earlier in the day, the sisters, stood in sombre silence next to the mortal remains of their father and mother, as a large number of visitors continued to stream in at the official bungalow of the Chief of Defence Staff (CDS), since morning.

"Both General Rawat and my sister were cremated on a common pyre at Brar Square. We will pick the ashes early morning tomorrow in a 'kalash' and then head to Haridwar, where the ashes will be immersed in the holy Ganga and some rituals will be performed," Yash Vardhan Singh, brother-in-law of General Rawat, said after the cremation.

A priest chanted Sanskrit shlokas and a 17-gun salute was accorded to the general in accordance with protocol at the Brar Square crematorium.

Chief Justice of India N V Ramana, Home Minister Amit Shah, National Security Advisor Ajit Doval, Congress leader Rahul Gandhi, Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath, former defence minister A K Antony, a number of Union ministers and senior leaders of political parties, religious gurus, seers and several lawmakers paid their last respects to India's first Chief of Defence Staff and his wife at their Kamraj Marg bungalow.

The mortal remains of General Rawat and his wife were kept at the official residence for the first half of the day on Friday for people to pay their respects.

Jaipur-based Col (retd) Vijay Rawat, 60, younger brother of Gen Rawat, said, "I had spoken to him before he went to Tamil Nadu to attend the function at Wellington. Had never thought, fate would take him away from us".

"We will be taking his ashes to Haridwar tomorrow. We family members will be going to the holy town to immerse his 'asthi' (ashes) into the Ganga river," he said before the funeral procession began.

Around 2:20 pm, amid chants of 'Vande Mataram' and 'General Rawat amar rahe', the funeral procession of the chief of defence staff and his wife left his official residence, for their final journey.

Military personnel drawn from all the three services marched towards the streets as drummers played along in tribute to the Rawats.

As India's first Chief of Defence Staff, General Rawat was tasked to bring in theatre command and jointness among the three services, and he was pushing these with a tough approach and specific timelines in the last two years.

Earlier in the day, right outside his official residence, several people who had gathered, raised slogans of 'Bharat Mata Ki Jai', 'General Rawat amar rahe', and 'Uttarakhand ka heera amar rahe', while dignitaries paid floral tributes and last respects till the funeral procession left the bungalow.

(With PTI Inputs)

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