House panel to discuss women in combat roles, grievance redressal
The panel has selected 18 subjects spanning personnel, policy and operational matters for examination, mainly the critical areas in which the Indian military and the Ministry of Defence have been working on over the last few years.
Written by Amrita Nayak Dutta
New Delhi | November 25, 2025 04:20 AM IST
2 min read
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Women are not allowed to join core combat arms of the Army such as Infantry, Armoured Corps and Mechanised Infantry as on today.
Induction of women in combat roles in the Armed Forces, review and assessment of personnel training, and grievance redressal mechanism in defence services are some of the key matters to be taken up by the parliamentary Standing Committee on Defence for examination in 2025-26.
The panel headed by BJP’s Lok Sabha member Radha Mohan Singh will also take up a review of Border Roads Organisation (BRO) in creating infrastructure in strategic locations and border areas, a review of self-reliance and modernisation of Defence Public Sector Undertakings (DPSUs) and status of various projects of the Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO).
The panel has selected 18 subjects spanning personnel, policy and operational matters for examination, mainly the critical areas in which the Indian military and the Ministry of Defence have been working on over the last few years.
Women are not allowed to join core combat arms of the Army such as Infantry, Armoured Corps and Mechanised Infantry as on today. Some of the combat support arms, such as Corps of Engineers, the Regiment of Artillery and Corps of Signals and all services, have women officers. However, only the Corps of Military Police inducts women as soldiers.
Amrita Nayak Dutta writes on defence and national security as part of the national bureau of The Indian Express. In the past, Amrita has extensively reported on the media industry and broadcasting matters, urban affairs, bureaucracy and government policies. In the last 14 years of her career, she has worked in newspapers as well as in the online media space and is well versed with the functioning of both newsrooms. Amrita has worked in the northeast, Mumbai and Delhi. She has travelled extensively across the country, including in far-flung border areas, to bring detailed reports from the ground and has written investigative reports on media and defence. She has been working for The Indian Express since January 2023. ... Read More