Vasanth Venugopal

Colonel
Vasanth Venugopal
AC
Born (1967-03-25)March 25, 1967
Bangalore, Karnataka, India
Died July 31, 2007(2007-07-31) (aged 40)
Uri, Jammu and Kashmir, India
Allegiance India India
Service/branch Indian Army, Maratha Light Infantry
Rank Colonel
Commands held CO 9 Maratha LI
Awards Ashoka Chakra (posthumous)

Colonel Vasanth Venugopal, AC (25 March 1967 31 July 2007) was the Commanding Officer of 9 Maratha Light Infantry, a unit of the Indian Army. On 31 July 2007, he was killed in action while preventing heavily armed infiltrators from crossing the Indian border at Uri, Jammu and Kashmir.[1] As a result he was posthumously awarded the Ashoka Chakra India's highest military decoration for peacetime gallantry.

Biography

Born to Praphulla and NK Venugopal in Bangalore, India, he was the youngest of two brothers. His father's work required the family to travel throughout the state of Karnataka and Vasanth went to schools in Udupi, Shimoga and Bangalore. He graduated from MES College, Bangalore in 1988. While in college, he was a member of the National Cadet Corps, through which he participated in the Indo-Canada World Youth Exchange Programme of 1986-87.

Vasanth joined the Indian Military Academy, Dehradun in 1988. On 10 June 1989, he was commissioned into 9 MARATHA LI. In a military career spanning eighteen years, he served in Pathankot, Sikkim, Gandhinagar, Ranchi, Bangalore and various sectors of Jammu and Kashmir.

"I go where my men go", he told his mother when she asked him if a colonel should participate in all operations conducted by his men. On 28 October 2006 he took over as Commanding Officer of 9 Maratha Light Infantry. The battalion was at that time posted in Uri Sector of Jammu and Kashmir.

Less than a year later, he and Radio Operator Lance Naik Ganpat Shashikant were killed in a gun battle with militants who were trying to infiltrate the Indian border.[2][3]

On July 31, his troops surrounded terrorists in a forest and blocked all their escape routes in the Uri sector in Kashmir. Despite being wounded, the colonel and his men engaged the terrorists in a fierce encounter. The daring officer led from the front and helped gun down the terrorists. Tragically, he was hit by a bullet and died in hospital. "He ensured that all eight infiltrators were wiped out even as he laid down his life for the nation. He was a true soldier who was dedicated to the country and his force", General J. J. Singh, Chief of Army Staff at the time, said after Colonel Vasanth's death.

Honours and legacy

Colonel Vasanth was cremated with full military honours on 1 August 2007 in Bangalore.[4]

He was posthumously awarded the Ashoka Chakra,[5] the peacetime equivalent of the Param Vir Chakra, India's highest military decoration for gallantry awarded for the "most conspicuous bravery or some daring or pre-eminent valour or self-sacrifice" other than in the face of the enemy.[6] Colonel Vasanth is the first person from the state of Karnataka, India to have received this honour.[7]

Colonel Vasanth's biography Forever Forty, written by his wife Subhashini Vasanth and Veena Prasad was released by Joginder Jaswant Singh and Santosh Hegde on 10 July 2011 at Crossword Bookstore, Bangalore.[8]

References

  1. "Colonel killed in Uri encounter". Indian Express. July 31, 2007.
  2. "J&K: Colonel among 6 killed in army operation". Rediff News. July 31, 2007.
  3. "8 Afghan infiltrators, one jawan killed". The Hindu. Aug 2, 2007.
  4. "Col. Vasanth cremated". The Hindu. Aug 2, 2007.
  5. "Three Army men awarded Ashok Chakra posthumously". Press Information Bureau. Jan 23, 2008.
  6. "Honours and Awards". Official Website of Indian Army. Retrieved 25 July 2011.
  7. "They paid the highest price for the nation's safety". Hinduonnet. 29 Oct 2008.
  8. Madhukar, Jayanthi (9 July 2011). "An officer, gentleman & 40 forever". Retrieved 19 January 2016.


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