Hindustan Times (Delhi)

CISF will raise elite dog squad to track ‘fidayeen attackers’

BELGIAN MALINOIS Dog squad will be trained to thwart possible suicide strikes at Delhi Metro network and IGI airport

- Anvit Srivastava anvit.srivastava@hindustant­imes.com

NEWDELHI: To track down suicide attackers, the Central Industrial Security Force’s (CISF) Delhi Metro unit plans to procure a squad of Belgian Malinois — the dog breed that earned fame for sniffing out Osama Bin Laden’s hideout in Pakistan’s Abbottabad in 2001.

The CISF will train these dogs to thwart possible ‘fidayeen (suicide) attacks’ both in the Delhi Metro network and the Delhi airport. The CISF handles security at both these places.

Once in place, this will be the first such squad with any paramilita­ry force in the country to counter fidayeen attacks. These dogs were first deployed in the Kaziranga national park for antipoachi­ng operations.

The measure was initiated after repeated warnings from intelligen­ce agencies about a possibilit­y of such attacks in the two sensitive installati­ons.

Senior CISF officers said they chose the breed particular­ly after the Labradors, German Shepherds and Cocker Spaniels with the force failed to detect ‘fidayeen attackers’ during dummy tests. The CISF’S metro unit presently has 63 dogs.

“Recently, exercises were conducted to test the ability of our dog squad to counter fidayeen attackers. Our men posed as terrorists and tied explosives around them. The dogs were let off. Our existing squad has expertise in detecting explosives but their role in detecting fidayeen attackers was not so impactful,” said a senior officer on condition of anonymity.

It was then they decided to raise a dedicated squad of dogs that will be trained to identify suicide attackers and pin them down, the officer said.

“Their sole purpose will be to guard, track and attack. Initially the force was apprehensi­ve as these dogs are not peoplefrie­ndly. Once inducted, they will be used only to pin down fidayeen attackers and not for general explosive detection work at metro stations or airports. Their handlers will be undergo specialise­d training,” the officer said.

The force, however, is yet to decide on the number of Belgian Malinois it will purchase. The CISF had recently decided to raise its own SWAT (special weapons and tactics) team. These dogs are also expected to assist the elite SWAT unit once it is operationa­l.

Malinois are used in detection or attacks in war-torn areas. A special squad of dogs that had landed in Delhi in 2015 to sanitise and conduct anti-sabotage checks before US President Barack Obama’s visit included Bel-

gian Malinois dogs.

They also shot to internatio­nal fame for assisting US Navy Seals in sniffing out Osama Bin Laden’s hideout in Pakistan.

Belgian Malinois are used in anti-poaching operations as well. They were first deployed in the Kaziranga national park in 2013. According to TRAFFIC India, more than 50 dogs are currently deployed across 17 states at wildlife poaching and trade hot spots.

“They are considered the best policing dogs,” Saket Badola, director of TRAFFIC-INDIA, said. “They have better sniffing tendencies, they are more agile. Training these dogs is far easier. They are easy to maintain because their fur coat is not so thick.” “German shepherds are also used but they have a thick coat of hair so they are not as suitable for hot and humid conditions,” Badola said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India