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Shaurya Chakra
Shaurya Chakra
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Shaurya Chakra


Shaurya Chakra and its ribbon, the third highest peacetime decoration of India
TypeMedal
Awarded forAwarded for gallantry otherwise than in the face of the enemy.[1]
CountryIndia Republic of India
Presented byIndia Republic of India
Eligibility
  • Officers, men and women of all ranks of the Army, the Navy and the Air Force, of any of the Reserve Forces, of the Territorial Army, Militia and of any other lawfully constituted forces.
  • Members of the Nursing Services of the Armed Forces.
  • Civilian Citizens of either sex in all walks of life and members of Police Forces including Central Para-Military Forces and Railway protection Force.[1]
Post-nominalsSC
StatusCurrently Awarded
Established1952; 74 years ago (1952)
First award1952
Final award2021
Total awarded posthumously627
Total recipients2122 (As of 2023)[2]
Precedence
Next (higher) Ati Vishisht Seva Medal[3]
Equivalent Vir Chakra[a][3]
Next (lower) Yudh Seva Medal[3]

The Shaurya Chakra (lit.'Wheel of Gallantry') is an Indian military decoration awarded for valour, courageous action or self-sacrifice while not engaged in direct action with the enemy. It may be awarded to civilians as well as military personnel, sometimes posthumously. It is third in order of precedence of peacetime gallantry awards and comes after the Ashoka Chakra and the Kirti Chakra. It precedes the Yudh Seva Medal.

History

[edit]

Established as the "Ashoka Chakra, Class III" by the President of India, 4 January 1952 (with effect from 15 August 1947). The statutes were revised and the decoration renamed on 27 January 1967. Before 1967, the award was known as the Ashoka Chakra, Class III. Subsequent awards of the Shaurya Chakra are recognized by a bar to the medal ribbon (to date five have been awarded). It is possible for a recipient to be awarded the Ashoka Chakra or Kirti Chakra in addition for separate acts of gallantry.

Since July 1999, it also being given to Civilians of either gender in all walks of life, other than members of Police Forces and of recognized Fire Services.[4] From 1 February 1999, the central government set a monthly stipend of Rs. 750 for recipients of the award. Jammu and Kashmir awards a cash award of Rs. 700 (ca. 1960) for recipients of the Shaurya Chakra.

Design

[edit]

Medal: Circular bronze, 1-3/8 inches in diameter. In the centre, the Ashoka Chakra, surrounded by a lotus wreath and with an ornate edge. Suspended by a straight bar suspender. The medal is named on the edge.

Reverse: For pre-1967 awards, the medal is blank in the centre, with "Ashoka Chakra" in Hindi along the upper edge on the medal and the same name in English along the lower rim, "ASHOKA CHAKRA". On either side is a lotus design. The centre is blank, perhaps with the intent that details of the award be engraved there. There is no indication of the class on the pre-1967 awards. For the post-1967 awards, the, names are changed to "Shaurya Chakra" in Hindi above and "SHAURYA CHAKRA" below.

Ribbon: Green colour ribbon divided into four equal parts by three orange vertical lines.

Bar: If a recipient of the Chakra shall again perform such an act of gallantry as would have made him or her eligible to receive the Chakra, such further act of gallantry shall be recognised by a Bar to be attached to the riband by which the Chakra is suspended and, for every subsequent act of gallantry, an additional Bar shall be added and such Bar or Bars may also be awarded posthumously. For every such Bar, a replica of the Chakra in miniature shall be added to the riband when worn alone.

Eligibility

[edit]

It is the peacetime equivalent of the Vir Chakra. It is generally awarded for Counter-Insurgency operations and actions against the enemy during peace-time.

Following categories of persons are eligible for the Shaurya Chakra:

  • Officers and men and women of all ranks of the Army, the Navy and the Air Force, of any of the Reserve Forces, of the Territorial Army, Militia and of any other lawfully constituted forces.
  • Nursing officers of military nursing service .
  • Civilian citizens of either sex in all walks of life and members of Police Forces including Central Para-Military Forces and Railway Protection Force.

Recipients

[edit]

Notes

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References

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[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia

The Shaurya Chakra is a peacetime gallantry award established by the Government of India on 4 January 1952 as the Ashoka Chakra Class III and renamed on 27 January 1967, conferred for acts of valour, courageous action, or self-sacrifice otherwise than in the face of the enemy.
It serves as the peacetime equivalent of the Vir Chakra and holds the third position in precedence among India's peacetime gallantry decorations, following the Ashoka Chakra and Kirti Chakra.
The bronze medal, circular and 32 mm in diameter with raised rims, depicts the Ashoka Chakra on the obverse and features a ribbon of red, light blue, and green stripes; it may be awarded posthumously to personnel of the armed forces, central police organizations, state police, and civilians for exemplary bravery in operations such as counter-terrorism or internal security duties.
Announced biannually on the occasions of Republic Day and Independence Day, the award underscores recognition of heroism in non-combat scenarios, with recipients often honoured in investiture ceremonies at Rashtrapati Bhavan.

History

Institution and Early Years

The Shaurya Chakra was instituted on 4 January 1952 by the as the Ashoka Chakra Class III, with effect deemed to date from 15 August 1947, to honor acts of valor displayed away from direct enemy engagement. This peacetime gallantry award formed the third tier in the series, complementing higher honors like the Ashoka Chakra Class I and II for exceptional courage in non-combat scenarios such as internal disturbances or rescue efforts. The establishment addressed limitations in pre-independence British imperial decorations, including the , which primarily recognized or non-operational bravery but lacked alignment with India's sovereign framework for and personnel post-Republic. The award's creation responded to the need for formalized recognition of bravery in domains like counter-insurgency operations, mitigation, and maintenance of internal security, where actions did not meet the criteria required for wartime gallantry medals such as the . Prior to 1952, such exploits often went unacknowledged under the transitional award system following , prompting the government's notification in to standardize peacetime honors. This initiative reflected India's emphasis on in valor recognition, distinct from colonial-era precedents that emphasized battlefield heroism over domestic or auxiliary courage. The first Shaurya Chakra awards were conferred in , predominantly to personnel from the armed forces for demonstrated gallantry in , humanitarian rescues, and quelling internal rebellions. These early presentations underscored the medal's role in incentivizing selfless action amid post-partition challenges, including communal unrest and natural calamities, without overlapping with operational combat awards. By prioritizing empirical verification of individual contributions, the institution set a for rigorous focused on verifiable non-enemy-facing risks.

Evolution and Amendments

The statutes governing the Shaurya Chakra underwent revision on 27 January 1967, renaming the decoration from Class III and emphasizing its purpose for acts of gallantry not involving direct combat with an enemy, such as in internal security operations. This change coincided with India's intensifying focus on counter-insurgency efforts amid rising threats from insurgencies, enabling broader application to non-wartime scenarios. Eligibility criteria were further adapted in subsequent decades to incorporate personnel from , including the (CRPF), for valor displayed in operations against and left-wing , as demonstrated by consistent awards to such units in engagements across regions like Jammu and Kashmir and . Posthumous conferments have been permissible since the award's early framework, allowing recognition of fatal acts of bravery in high-risk internal security duties. Civilians from diverse backgrounds are also eligible for the decoration when exhibiting conspicuous courage outside military or police contexts. To align with the persistent nature of domestic security challenges, announcements of Shaurya Chakra awards occur twice annually—on (26 January) and Independence Day (15 August)—facilitating timely honors for recent exploits without altering core criteria for physical acts of or daring. This biannual cadence has supported increased recognitions amid operations addressing Naxalite insurgencies and terror incidents, though no formal expansions to non-traditional domains like cyber threats have been documented in the award's warrant.

Design and Symbolism

Medal Specifications

The Shaurya Chakra medal is circular in shape, made of , and measures one and three-eighth inches (approximately 35 mm) in diameter. On the obverse, it features an embossed replica of the emblem at the center, surrounded by a lotus wreath border. The medal is suspended from a straight of plain bronze. The reverse side bears the inscription "SHAURYA CHAKRA" embossed in both script and English, along with the year of the award. The motif draws from ancient Indian symbolism representing and the eternal wheel of law, while the lotus wreath evokes purity and triumph, elements absent of symbols like swords that distinguish wartime gallantry awards.

Ribbon and Wear Guidelines

The ribbon of the Shaurya Chakra is green in color, measuring 32 mm in width, and divided into four equal parts by three narrow vertical lines. It is worn suspended from the left chest pocket on uniforms and civilian attire. For recipients awarded the decoration multiple times, a bar is affixed to the to denote subsequent acts of gallantry warranting the . In ceremonial , the Shaurya Chakra ranks below the among peacetime gallantry awards. The guidelines stipulate that the full medal, suspended from the , is worn during undress occasions, while the bar alone is used on formal uniforms. Posthumous awards are presented to the during investiture ceremonies.

Eligibility and Criteria

Qualifying Acts of Bravery

The Shaurya Chakra recognizes acts of conspicuous gallantry or undertaken outside the context of direct during wartime operations. Qualifying deeds encompass valor demonstrated in counter-insurgency campaigns, anti-terrorist missions, and efforts to quell internal security threats, where personnel confront armed adversaries in undeclared conflict zones without the formal . Such acts prioritize immediate neutralization of threats to national stability, often in high-ambiguity environments like ambushes or fortified insurgent positions. Illustrative qualifying scenarios include engagements with militants in Jammu and Kashmir, where recipients have eliminated multiple terrorists under fire during cordon-and-search operations, as seen in awards to personnel from units like the for operations in 2020. Similarly, confrontations with Naxalite groups in forested terrains of qualify when involving direct assault on heavily armed groups, demonstrating empirical assessment of lethal risks through close-quarters combat or bomb disposal under duress. These differ from peacetime actions against foreign invaders by focusing on domestic insurgencies where causal threats stem from non-state actors exploiting ungoverned spaces. Beyond combat-like scenarios, bravery in or civil unrest—such as rescuing civilians from collapsing structures during floods or quelling riots amid improvised explosive threats—merits consideration if involving verifiable exposure to mortal danger beyond standard protocols. Distinguishing these from routine duties requires evidence of pre-eminent daring, such as solo advances into hostile areas or sustained fire suppression that averts larger casualties, underscoring a threshold of personal that empirically safeguards broader security objectives over individual preservation.

Recipient Categories

The Shaurya Chakra is conferred upon officers, personnel, and women of all ranks in the , , and , including members of reserve forces, the Territorial Army, and nursing services, for acts of gallantry in non-combat scenarios. Eligibility further encompasses members of (CAPF), such as the (CRPF) and (BSF), as well as forces and the Railway Protection Force, reflecting the award's application to internal security operations. Civilians of either sex, employed in public or private sectors or otherwise engaged in everyday pursuits, qualify if they exhibit exceptional bravery against threats like or militancy, underscoring the decoration's broad inclusivity across societal spheres. Posthumous awards are standard for recipients who perish in qualifying acts, with associated monetary allowances—including lump-sum payments and pension increments—provided to dependents and calibrated according to the honoree's rank or status. This provision ensures recognition extends beyond living survivors, prioritizing empirical validation of sacrifice over posthumous formalities.

Award Administration

Nomination and Review Process

Recommendations for the Shaurya Chakra originate at the unit or formation level, where commanding officers or equivalent authorities document acts of gallantry through detailed citations supported by eyewitness accounts, operational logs, and other contemporaneous evidence. These initial nominations are escalated through the military chain of command to the respective service headquarters of the , , or , which compile and scrutinize them for completeness and verifiability before forwarding to the (MoD). The MoD receives submissions twice annually, typically for consideration in the (January 26) and Independence Day () cycles, ensuring alignment with national award announcements. Nominations undergo rigorous review within the , involving evaluation of the empirical basis for the claimed bravery—such as specificity of risks faced, actions taken, and outcomes achieved—to distinguish meritorious cases from routine duties or inflated reports. This process prioritizes causal evidence of or valor in non-combat scenarios, with cross-checks against multiple sources to mitigate potential embellishments or institutional biases in originating reports. Following MoD endorsement, the provides final approval, formalizing the award through notification in , which serves as the official record and enables conferment. This presidential sanction, exercised on advice from the , underscores the award's meritocratic intent, though historical instances of delayed or contested approvals highlight the challenges in balancing expedition with evidentiary rigor. Post-approval, recipients are listed publicly, promoting transparency in selections.

Conferment Ceremonies

The Shaurya Chakra is presented during formal investiture ceremonies at in , presided over by the as the supreme commander of the armed forces. These events emphasize the solemn recognition of peacetime gallantry, with recipients or their receiving the , an accompanying citation detailing the act of bravery, and a . The ceremonies are conducted in phases to accommodate the volume of awards, ensuring dignified presentation without undue delay following approval. A notable example occurred on May 22, 2025, during the Defence Investiture Ceremony 2025 (Phase-I), when President conferred 33 Shaurya Chakras, including seven posthumous awards, alongside higher honors like Kirti Chakras. Similar phased ceremonies, such as Phase-II events, follow the same protocol, with the President personally pinning the medals on uniformed recipients or handing them to family members in cases of posthumous conferment. Media coverage through official releases and broadcasts focuses on factual recaps of the heroic deeds, avoiding to maintain the awards' integrity. Investiture ceremonies align with the biannual announcement cycles of gallantry awards on (January 26) and Independence Day (August 15), though presentations occur throughout the year in multiple sessions. Annually, over 100 such awards, including Shaurya Chakras, are bestowed across armed forces, , and police personnel, promoting public appreciation for acts of valor often performed in obscurity. This structured frequency underscores the government's commitment to timely honors, fostering a culture of recognition for selfless service.

Recipients and Notable Awards

Distribution by Service Branches

The Indian Army has historically received the majority of Shaurya Chakra awards, reflecting its central role in counter-insurgency, border security, and internal threat neutralization operations during peacetime. , particularly the (CRPF), account for a significant portion in recent years, driven by engagements in Jammu and Kashmir and anti-Naxal operations, often comprising over 20% of annual recipients in high-intensity periods. Awards to the and are comparatively few, generally limited to instances of specialized maritime rescues, aerial extractions, or aviation hazards, with the Air Force recording 183 total recipients as of recent tallies. In 2024, a total of 34 Shaurya Chakras were conferred, predominantly to personnel involved in operational theaters. For 2025 Phase-I (announced May 2025), 33 awards were given, including 7 posthumous, with allocations spanning the , CRPF, and other CAPFs amid counter-terrorism efforts; honors that year included 14 Shaurya Chakras, with 9 to members and 2 to personnel. Award numbers surged post-2010, correlating with escalated insurgencies and low-intensity conflicts, elevating annual totals from single digits in earlier decades to 30+ in recent years. Posthumous awards have trended upward in counter-terror contexts, as seen in the 21% rate (7 of 33) for 2025 Phase-I, compared to the overall historical average of approximately 31% across over 2,100 recipients. Civilian awards remain rare, under 5% of the total, emphasizing the medal's focus on confronting organized threats rather than isolated acts.

Prominent Examples and Acts

Major Aditya Kumar of the 10th Battalion, , received the Shaurya Chakra in August for his leadership during a January operation in , Jammu and Kashmir, where a military faced an aggressive mob of over 100 stone-pelters attempting to encircle and the troops with stones and possibly more lethal intent amid militant-influenced unrest. Kumar's prompt decision to return fire dispersed the attackers, preventing casualties among his unit and enabling the convoy's safe extraction, thereby neutralizing an immediate threat in a volatile asymmetric environment where hesitation could have resulted in ambushes or worse. Major Kunal Munnagir Gosavi of the Regiment of Artillery was posthumously awarded the Shaurya Chakra in August 2017 for his actions during a November 2016 terrorist infiltration at the army camp in Jammu and Kashmir, where he led a quick reaction team against heavily armed militants who had breached perimeter defenses and killed several soldiers. Despite sustaining fatal injuries, Gosavi engaged the terrorists at close quarters, pinning them down and buying time for reinforcements to arrive, which contributed to the elimination of four attackers and minimized further losses among troops and potential civilian evacuees in the vicinity. In May 2025, Major Vijay Verma earned the Shaurya Chakra for orchestrating an ambush on April 26, 2024, in Jammu and Kashmir that eliminated a hardcore terrorist linked to multiple attacks, as his team detected and neutralized the target at close range despite return fire, preventing planned strikes on security forces and local populations. Similarly, CRPF constables Sanjay Tiwari and Feda Hussain were among Independence Day 2025 recipients for a Srinagar encounter where they directly confronted and helped neutralize terrorists, safeguarding urban areas from bombings or shootings that had threatened civilian lives in prior incidents. These acts underscore the award's role in recognizing proactive neutralization of persistent insurgent threats, where individual resolve directly preserved lives and disrupted networks in non-conventional conflicts.

Controversies

Operational Disputes

In 2018, Major Aditya Kumar of the 10 received the Shaurya Chakra for gallantry displayed during counter-insurgency operations in Jammu and Kashmir, including an incident on January 27, 2018, in where his convoy faced a stone-pelting mob, prompting return fire that resulted in three civilian deaths. Official military accounts described the action as lawful against an aggressive crowd harboring potential insurgents, consistent with in volatile areas. However, the award provoked significant local outrage in , with protesters and separatist groups alleging excessive force and civilian targeting, framing the operation as unprovoked aggression amid broader resentment toward security deployments. These criticisms, often amplified by regional media sympathetic to separatist narratives, lacked independent corroboration of intent beyond eyewitness accounts influenced by ongoing conflict dynamics. Rifleman Mohammad Aurangzeb Khan of the 44 , posthumously awarded the Shaurya Chakra in 2018 (presented in 2023), exemplified valor in high-risk patrols, notably during a , 2017, encounter where he shielded a comrade and engaged terrorists despite sustaining injuries. His abduction and beheading by militants on June 14, 2018, en route home for Eid underscored the perils of such duties in terrorist-prone zones. Separatist elements condemned the underlying patrols as provocative incursions that escalated tensions, portraying them as part of a cycle of rather than defensive necessity, though these views align with narratives minimizing terrorist threats. These cases illustrate operational frictions in Jammu and Kashmir counter-, where Shaurya Chakra awards validate actions essential for troop protection and disruption of terror networks, amid claims of overreach that frequently rely on anecdotal reports without forensic or ballistic substantiation. data indicates a sustained decline in terror incidents and infiltrations following intensified operations, attributing this to targeted interventions that dismantle militant ecosystems, contrasting with allegations often unsubstantiated by empirical review. Such disputes reflect causal realities of , where security imperatives in insurgency hotspots necessitate robust responses, even as local biases—stemming from entrenched separatist influences—amplify perceptions of excess over verified outcomes.

Procedural and Public Criticisms

In September 2022, the family of Gopal Singh Bhadoriya, a soldier martyred in Jammu and Kashmir in February 2018, returned a posthumously awarded after it was delivered by courier to their home in , citing a violation of protocols that require formal presentation ceremonies to honor the dignity of recipients and their families. The delivery delay stemmed from a multi-year dispute between the parents and the widow over service benefits and dependency claims, which halted administrative processing until resolution. Parents Munim Singh and family emphasized that couriering the insulted the martyr's sacrifice, demanding instead a proper . In 2019, Meghna Girish, mother of Major Akshay Girish Kumar in Jammu and Kashmir on November 29, 2016, publicly questioned the downgrading of her son's initial recommendation for a Shaurya Chakra to a mere mention in dispatches, arguing it undermined recognition of his battlefield valor as documented in unit reports and messages. The family cited evidence from operational records supporting the gallantry award, but the final decision rested on higher-level reviews without disclosed rationale for the change, prompting appeals to military authorities that yielded no reversal. This case highlighted perceived inconsistencies in the evaluation chain, where unit-level endorsements may not align with centralized approvals. Allegations of politicization, such as announcements timed to coincide with Day for publicity, have surfaced in media commentary, yet procedural records indicate these timings follow established annual cycles for gallantry honors approved by the President, with no substantiated of merit overrides or partisan influence in selection. Reversal rates remain low, as awards undergo multi-tier prioritizing empirical act verification over external pressures, countering amplified narratives lacking causal links to political interference. Post-incident adjustments, including expedited dispute resolutions for benefits and delivery protocols, have aimed to mitigate delays without compromising rigor.

Significance

Role in Indian Gallantry Framework

The Shaurya Chakra holds the third position in India's peacetime gallantry awards hierarchy, positioned below the —the highest peacetime honor for exceptional bravery not involving the enemy—and the , which recognizes distinguished service of a high order in similar contexts. Instituted on January 4, 1950, and revised in 1967 to align with wartime equivalents, it functions as the peacetime counterpart to the , extending recognition to acts of valor during non-combat operations such as counter-insurgency, anti-terrorism efforts, and internal security duties. These scenarios encompass the majority of ' engagements post-independence, given limited full-scale wars (primarily 1947–48, 1962, 1965, 1971, and 1999) relative to ongoing asymmetric threats. This positioning complements the overall gallantry framework by bridging the gap between elite wartime awards and routine service commendations, incentivizing individual initiative against ill-defined threats like insurgencies or border skirmishes outside declared hostilities. Unlike higher peacetime awards, which demand near-supreme sacrifice or strategic impact, the Shaurya Chakra targets mid-tier heroism—such as leading assaults on militant hideouts or neutralizing explosives under duress—fostering a culture of proactive risk-taking in ambiguous environments. Empirical data from annual conferments underscore this balance: between and , Shaurya Chakra awards averaged 15–25 per year, compared to 1–5 for Kirti Chakras and fewer than 2 for Chakras, ensuring higher honors retain exclusivity while broadly validating operational valor. By filling this niche, the sustains doctrinal evolution in non-kinetic domains, where verifiable outcomes—like disrupted terror networks or fortified perimeter defenses—demonstrate causal links between recognized acts and refined protocols for low-intensity conflicts. This structure avoids over-inflation of prestige across the system, as evidenced by the rarity of posthumous upgrades or dilutions in criteria since , thereby upholding motivational efficacy without compromising standards for transcendent gallantry.

Impact on Morale and Policy

The Shaurya Chakra enhances morale within the by providing formal recognition for acts of gallantry in non-combat environments, such as counter-terrorism operations and , which validates personnel's risks and sacrifices. This public acknowledgment fosters a sense of purpose and camaraderie, particularly in high-threat units facing internal security challenges, where empirical observations from military evaluations link such honors to sustained motivation amid prolonged deployments. In terms of retention and enlistment, the award directly influences personnel policies, as seen in the where gallantry decorations like the Shaurya Chakra grant additional evaluation marks, prioritizing recipients for post-training absorption into regular service on January 10, 2023. Similarly, during the third assessment phase for the inaugural Agniveer batch on June 29, 2025, such awards were weighted heavily in career progression decisions, correlating with improved reenlistment outcomes by incentivizing exceptional performance. The award's framework also shapes broader by embedding lessons from cited acts into training doctrines, promoting tactical adaptations that balance force application with operational efficacy in asymmetric threats, without yielding to external pressures for restraint that ignore causal threats from non-state actors. This reinforces a emphasis on resilience, as evidenced by recurring citations in anti-Naxal and Jammu & Kashmir operations, where honored interventions highlight the need for proactive measures over reactive .

References

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