
Kargil Vijay Diwas: Capt Keishing Clifford Nongrum charged towards enemy bunkers to avenge his men, sacrificing himself
Also read: Kargil Vijay Diwas: The story of Maha Vir Chakra Major Rajesh Adhikari who died with his wife's unopened letter
Just hours earlier, Clifford and his team had scaled a vertical cliff, catching the enemy off guard. But their column was soon pinned down under heavy fire. 'Clifford knew time was running out. If we didn't dislodge the enemy before daybreak, we'd be sitting ducks,' says Col Bhalothia, who shared handwritten notes about the officer and the operation with us. 'He moved to the second bunker, where an enemy machine gun was creating havoc, and attempted to snatch it. At that point, enemy soldiers from the third bunker spotted him and fired a volley of bullets that hit him.'
Captain Clifford's sheer bravery and disregard for personal safety stunned the enemy, giving his men a chance to regroup and continue the assault. True to the spirit of 12 JAKLI, the post was overrun before daybreak. 'He succumbed to his injuries — but not before hoisting the Tricolour atop Point 4812.'
For his leadership and extraordinary valour, the 24-year-old officer from Shillong was posthumously awarded the Maha Vir Chakra, India's second-highest wartime gallantry honour.
In a remarkable twist of fate, a diary recovered after the mission — belonging to a Pakistani officer — revealed that Clifford had unknowingly faced the same officer six months earlier during a deployment at Tiger Saddle in Siachen. 'The locations and incidents described in the diary matched Clifford's deployment. It was destiny that they ended up facing each other again,' says Col Bhalothia.
Among Col Bhalothia's notes, one incident stands out: During a patrol, Clifford and his men were caught in a snow blizzard. As his soldiers began to fall ill, he put them in sleeping bags in buddy pairs and stayed outside in the freezing cold, checking on them through the night and chest-pumping them to keep them conscious. 'It was a miracle they survived — just some frostbite and chilblains.'
Off the battlefield , his CO remembers him as a highly motivated youngster with a daredevil streak. 'He loved music, football, outdoor activities and had a great temperament. He was physically very fit and couldn't wait to get into action.'

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The Hindu
2 days ago
- The Hindu
Brig. Mohammed Usman's story: excerpt from The Lion of Naushera
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Time of India
3 days ago
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Time of India
6 days ago
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