The National Flag at Attari |
One
does not know how and who started off this fad of having tall flagstaffs to
hoist flags the dimensions of which keep increasing by the day. The other day,
the flag hoisted near the Attari border with Pakistan created a stir. Mounted
on a 360 ft. tall staff, claimed to be the tallest of all flagstaffs in the
country, it flies the heaviest ever national flag (55 tons). Its dimensions are
120x80 ft and it has cost the Punjab Government Rs. 3.5 Crore (billion). The
annual maintenance contract for it has had to be awarded to a private company
as, apparently, the Amritsar Improvement Trust, the institution that installed
it, does not have any outfit that could possibly take care of it. So close to
the border it is that the flag is claimed to be visible from the Anarkali Bazar
of Lahore in Pakistan.
Its
enormous height and size have brought in controversies in the wake of its
unfurlment at Attari. Pakistani Rangers guarding the borders with India have
alleged that such a tall flag has been installed only for espionage purposes.
They think it would be used to peep across the borders from this side to pry on
the goings-on there. They said that the flag at the top has powerful cameras to
monitor activities in Pakistan. One is surprised to hear such a stupid
argument. India didn’t have to have a tall flag to mount surveillance over and
across the borders as hundreds of air force and civilian planes, leave alone
satellites, fly at greater heights in the area everyday. These could do a
better job and very easily at that. Nonetheless, authorities in India did
convey to the Pakistanis that there was no camera on top of the pole; there was
only a light - a regulation light that had to be mounted there.
But
then this is only one of these tall flags. The second highest is somewhere in
Ranchi – the capital of Jharkhand. The flag pole is 283 ft. high. Several
states seem to have jumped on to the bandwagon to install tall flags – in what
looks like competitive patriotism. Hyderabad, Pune, Faridabad, Raipur and so on
all have flags flying at a height that is above 200 ft. Closer home, Bhopal too
tried its hand at installing, once again, an under 300 ft. tall flag. It swayed
violently in the rather strong breeze and soon got torn. I remember it having
been replaced at least once. But for months now it is no longer visible
anywhere. Probably the project has been given up as a bad job even though quite
a tidy sum was spent on it from the public exchequer
One
wonders who in these governments were trying to prove their patriotism.
Enormous amounts of money have been wasted tn this what seems to be futile
exercise. Patriotic fervor cannot be measured by the size of the flag and the
height at which it is flown. The flags of smaller sizes flown at lower heights,
for example at Rashtrpati Bhawan, are no less patriotic. Besides, there is a Flag
Code as modified in 2002 that needs to be observed. According to it, the
biggest size for the flag could be 6300mms x 4200mms. I have not come across
any amendment that allows flags exceeding these dimensions to be flown.
With the proliferation of the outsized flags
one wonders whether the extant Flag Code is being violated. If that is so the
authorities should cry a halt to the frivolity being displayed in respect of
the National Flag that symbolically represents our values and aspirations.
*Photo from internet
17th March 2017
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