Tura (Meghalaya), May 19: In a major boost to youth development in Garo Hills, Chief Minister Conrad K. Sangma on Monday inaugurated the newly relocated 41 Meghalaya Battalion NCC at Cherangre, Tura, calling the moment “almost like a dream come true.”
The inauguration began with a Guard of Honour, ribbon-cutting, and unveiling of a commemorative plaque, followed by a tree-plantation drive. NCC cadets performed a prayer dance, while former cadets shared how the corps shaped their confidence and careers. Cultural presentations capped the event.
Calling the NCC a “school of discipline, leadership, and patriotism,” Sangma said its relocation from Shillong to Tura on March 3 marks a decisive push to decentralize opportunity. He recalled his own childhood dream of joining the armed forces, drawn by “the discipline, dedication, and aura that surrounded men and women in uniform.”
With 75 percent of Meghalaya’s population below 35, the Chief Minister said youth remain the government’s top priority. “The success of a government should not be measured by how many crores are spent or how many buildings are constructed. It should be measured by how many lives are transformed because of those investments,” he told the gathering. “Development should not be judged only by the number of stadiums we build or medals we win. It should be judged by how those stadiums improve the quality, skills, confidence, and values of our children and youth.”
Sangma tied the new battalion complex to the state’s recently unveiled Youth and Sports Policy, calling it “a roadmap for the future” that binds education, sports, arts, entrepreneurship, and skill development. “The inauguration of the 41 Meghalaya Battalion NCC complex is part of that larger vision,” he said, assuring full support for pending works including the boundary wall. “This is not an expenditure — it is an investment. The returns from investing in our youth will be far greater than the money spent.”
Highlighting Meghalaya’s rise, he noted Shillong’s emergence as a cultural hub and plans for the country’s biggest football stadium. “I have always believed that the youth of Meghalaya are second to none — not just in the country, but in the world,” he said, urging cadets to embrace resilience. Recalling his 2004 poll defeat, he added, “At some point, you will have to choose between blaming the world or improving yourself. I hope you choose growth and self-improvement.”
The 41 Meghalaya Battalion traces its origins to the 15 Assam Artillery Battery NCC raised on June 3, 1961, and was upgraded in October 2020. Responsible for NCC training across five Garo Hills districts, the unit has expanded under the Border Area Expansion Plan from 3 colleges and 6 schools to 7 colleges and 18 schools. It now has 1,120 cadets in 7 companies, with total strength touching 2,400 as of May 2026. The government’s allotment of additional land and buildings in Tura is set to deepen NCC’s reach across the region


































