Army Chief Deepak Kapoor has refused to accept a 20 per cent hike in his pension provided on the basis of his disability suffered during service.
61-year-old Kapoor was found to have suffered an impairment in his left ear after exposure to the booming sound of artillery guns during a demonstration on anti-terror operation in the US in July 2009. After the disability was reported in the media, the army chief is said to have written to Defence Minister A K Antony, saying he was not inclined towards receiving the disability pension after his retirement on March 31 this year.
The disability, which put him in a lower medical category, would have fetched him a 20 per cent hike in pension. Kapoor had realised that he was unable to hear properly
Doctors then advised him to use a hearing aid in his left ear. They had also diagnosed that he was "fit for release from service" in the medical categorisation 'H-2' which denotes a low medical category where he cannot continue in service. Kapoor retires on March 31 when Lieutenant General V K Singh, the Eastern Army Commander and senior-most infantry officer, will take over.



