Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

The hidden enemy

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Integrate counsellin­g and other de-stressing techniques into the system to reduce suicides in security forces

On January 5, a Central Industrial Security Force (CISF) sub-inspector used his service revolver to commit suicide at a Delhi Metro station. On January 16, a CISF constable used his rifle to commit suicide while on duty at the Bengaluru internatio­nal airport . Two days later, a trainee SI with the CISF committed suicide in Hyderabad. On February 9, a CISF jawan took his life at Okhla, and two weeks later, a 23year-old CISF officer working at the Pune airport committed suicide. Initial reports attributed the five suicides to stress outside work. Personal problems constitute about 50% of the suicides witnessed in the force, and CISF’s director general OP Singh recently said that all efforts are being taken to address this issue. The psychologi­cal stress on personnel is bad for the morale of the security force and if unchecked a stressed out personnel could even be a threat to the public.

Alarm bells are also ringing in the armed forces where a high number of personnel are taking the extreme step. Between 2012 and 2015, about 449 suicides were seen across the services. Stress is a major reason, but the sahayak system — which has been in the news especially after the suicide of Lance-Naik Roy Mathew — needs to be looked into to ascertain whether it is a contributi­ng factor. The forces are losing a disturbing number of personnel and the reason is not the enemy’s bullet, but the flaws in force management. Former officers have blamed the lack of discipline to a spike in suicides and fratricide­s. According to Mr Singh, the CISF is constituti­ng leave committees in all its units, similar to the one in the Delhi Metro — this is a good move that could have been initiated much earlier.

Latest technology, sophistica­ted weaponry and advanced training are important, but mental and physical fitness of the force is equally critical. Our security forces must integrate counsellin­g and de-stressing techniques into the system. Leave management, a balance in officer-jawan ratio and better officerjaw­an relations also need to be addressed.

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