Union Defence Minister Manohar Parrikar would address a public gathering on October 4 in Goa where he would be felicitated.
"Parrikar is expected to address more than 10,000 people at the historic Azad Maidan in Panaji on October 4, where he would be congratulated and felicitated for the achievements over the surgical strike," BJP Goa unit president Vinay Tendulkar told PTI.
Tendulkar claimed this would be the first public speech by the Defence Minister post the surgical strike.
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On Tuesday afternoon, Parrikar will arrive at the Dabolim airport from where he would be taken in a procession to Azad Maidan.
To a question, Tendulkar said the surgical strike will be one of the issues that would be highlighted during the Goa Assembly elections due next year.
"Prime Minister Narendra Modi had said that sacrifices in Uri attack would not go in vain and he has kept the word. Only BJP and its government have the capability to take such stern action which is historic. We will be highlighting this achievement during the forthcoming poll campaign in Goa," Tendulkar said.
India had recently carried out surgical strikes on seven terror launch pads across the LoC with the Army saying that its special forces inflicted "significant casualties" on terrorists preparing to infiltrate from Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (PoK).
Defence sources said seven terror launch pads across the Line of Control(LoC) were destroyed by special forces of the Indian Army on the intervening night of September 28 and 29 in a nearly five-hour-long operation during which heliborne and ground forces were deployed.
"Earlier, one thing was sure that India won't cross (Line
of Control). Now that is one thing that's missing. In strategy and such kind of issues, you need to put uncertainty in their minds. That has been achieved," said Parrikar.
The minister said the operation has also left the nation satisfied. "It was a continuous insult to be treated like this...Someone comes, hits us and we can't do anything," he said.
The Minister said he had taken the initiative for the army to experiment with three to four types of fences on pilot basis but "they have massive procedures".
Following this, he has now asked the Defence Research and Development Organisation to experiment with smart solutions to secure military bases.
"The DRDO has been asked to try fences of different kinds - microwave, laser, smart fence that can pick vibration and CCTV cameras that can pick movement at one kilometre," he said.