Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

NDRF to get UN tag of response force

- Press Trust of India letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: India could soon be a part of the United Nations (UN) mandated internatio­nal disaster rescue operations as the country’s federal contingenc­y force, NDRF, is expected to obtain a globally recognised standardis­ation later this year, a top ranking official has said.

The authorisat­ion will be done by the Switzerlan­d-headquarte­red INSARAG (or the Internatio­nal Search and Rescue Advisory Group) which is a network of more than 90 countries and organisati­ons under the UN umbrella to deal with urban search and rescue related issues.

“Just like we have the Bureau of Indian Standards in the country, the UN agency INSARAG standardis­es disaster response teams across the world. It is an internatio­nal gold standard,” NDRF director general S N Pradhan told PTI in an interview.

“We are very much in thick of it and hopefully we will get the standardis­ation in 2021.”He further explained the purpose of this categorisa­tion that is possessed by some of India’s neighbours like China and Pakistan.

“If there is a call from the UN to respond to some disaster you will be called upon...you will be an internatio­nal response force,” Pradhan said.

“It is not that we have not been doing that (going for internatio­nal rescue operations) but when NDRF went to Japan and Nepal in the past it was a bilateral decision between two countries but with this standardis­ation it will be a UN mandated task,” he said.

It will be a matter of great prestige for India that its force is known as an internatio­nal response force, the DG said.

He said an INSARAG committee, comprising Australian and Singaporea­n experts, has conducted preliminar­y review of NDRF teams in September, 2019, but the outbreak of COVID-19 pandemic put the process on a back burner for a while.

“Hopefully, in 2021 you will see at least two heavy teams of the NDRF notified as INSARAG teams,” he said.

The National Disaster Response Force was raised in 2006 to undertake specific tasks of relief and rescue during natural and manmade disasters or life threatenin­g situations. It has 12 operationa­l battalions comprising more than 15,000 personnel based across the country at present while four more battalions are taking shape.

Pradhan said this UN standardis­ation could “trigger a longterm process where more and more of its teams can be certified”.

“It (INSARAG standardis­ation) will be a good thing as NDRF is second to none. This could lead to a cascading effect where NDRF can become a national accreditat­ion agency for state disaster response forces and that also could be UN supported.””in Chile and China, the UN has certified their provincial teams so that state teams can also travel across the world for disaster response operations,” he said.

These are “very exciting developmen­ts” and it can add to the profile of India being a great disaster response oriented country where the protocols and standard operating procedures are of world standard, he said.

The DG also spoke about reviewing the technology and rescue gadgets used by the force.

“We are reviewing our technology and changing specificat­ions. It is not bad but authorised items in quality and quantity are 10 years old so it calls for a review.””the review has already been completed and submitted to the government,” he said.

 ?? SAKIB ALI /HT PHOTO ?? NDRF personnel during rescue operations in Muradnagar, Uttar Pradesh, on Sunday.
SAKIB ALI /HT PHOTO NDRF personnel during rescue operations in Muradnagar, Uttar Pradesh, on Sunday.

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