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Jawan viral video: Unable to contact him, Tej Bahadur's family files Habeas Corpus in Delhi HC

Tej Bahadur Yadav's family claim they have been trying to contact him and even wrote two letters to the BSF.

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Tej Bahadur Yadav’s family, has filed a habeas corpus at the Delhi High Court claiming they were unable to contact him.  For the uninitiated, a habeas corpus is a writ requiring a person under arrest to be brought before a judge or court. Yadav’s brother-in-law told The Indian Express: “We will send legal notice to the DG today. The habeas corpus has been filed in Delhi High Court.”

His family claim they have been trying to contact him and even wrote two letters to the BSF but haven’t been able to get a reply, and they kept ‘avoiding their calls’.

BSF jawan Tej Bahadur Yadav had on January 9 posted a video on Facebook which showed a meal box comprising a watery soup-like dal, which he said had only turmeric and salt and a burnt chapatti.
He had said this is what jawans were served at mealtime on duty at places including the Line of Control (LoC) with Pakistan and that jawans often went to bed on empty stomach. Pursuant to the video going viral on the social media, the Prime Minister's Office had sought a detailed factual report on it from the Union Home Ministry and BSF. 

A PIL was also filed in the Delhi High Court seeking a direction to the government to depute higher officers to supervise cooking of proper healthy food and its distribution. It sought a status report regarding the quality of food served to soldiers along the LoC. The high court had issued notice on the petition to various paramilitary forces, including the Border Security Force (BSF), seeking their stand on the allegation of poor quality food being served to the troops. 

It had also directed BSF to produce before it the investigation report and the steps taken with regard to the allegations levelled by the BSF jawan.Now less than a month after the PIL was filed, Yadav's wife, Sharmila, and his family are claiming that the soldier is untraceable and that they have not been able to reach him. 

She has sought a high-level enquiry into his disappearance as well as the recent rejection of his plea for voluntary retirement. When contacted, Ex-paramilitary Personnel Welfare Association general secretary Ranbir Singh said that he, along with Sharmila and her elder brother, had met the BSF director general who had assured them that a "fair inquiry as per procedure" will be conducted in the case.

Singh also said that the BSF DG told them that the jawan was hospitalised.Earlier, BSF had said that Yadav's plea under the Voluntary Retirement Scheme (VRS) was cancelled as a Court of Inquiry (CoI) was pending against him. 

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