Several war veterans were felicitated by giving a rose even as they flaunted their medals and flashed the invite of the President, which they had declined.
Like Col (retd) Raj Dhingra of the Rajput Regiment, many felt nostalgic as they shared the vivid memories of the battlefield.
"I am running 80 currently, but I still feel like going to the front again and battling with the enemy," Dhingra, who was injured due to a shell explosion in the 1965 war in the Poonch sector, said.
Flaunting a rose given to him during felicitation, Col Kirit Joshipura (retd), another war veteran and one of the protesting voices over the OROP issue at the Jantar Mantar, said, "The rose given to us by the government is full of thorns. How can we accept it?" he said.
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Joshipura was referring to the impediments in the OROP announced by the government.
Incidentally, Major Gen Satbir Singh, one of the key person in the OROP agitation who was involved in negotiations with the government claimed that he had not got any invitation, but refused to elaborate on the issue.
"We have boycotted the function in protest as the government is yet to agree upon the OROP as per its definition," said Nebb, a Vir Chakra and BAR award recipient who had shot a Pakistani aircraft in the 1965 war.
President Pranab Mukherjee today hosted a high tea for 1965 war veterans in the Rashtrapati Bhavan complex as the country celebrated the golden jubilee of the war with Pakistan.
Amid protests by a section of ex-servicemen over the issue of OROP, some veterans attended the event along with their family members.