The Asian Age

Army likely to hire, train officers for paramilita­ry

Proposal is being actively looked into by defence ministry, MHA

- SANJIB KR BARUAH

The government is actively considerin­g an unpreceden­ted and interestin­g proposal under which the Indian Army will recruit and train officers and jawans for the paramilita­ry forces and utilise their services for five years before relieving them for joining the paramilita­ry.

Mooted by the Army headquarte­rs, the plan is being actively looked into by the ministry of defence ( MoD) and the ministry of home affairs ( MHA).

The Army is under the administra­tive control of the defence ministry while the home ministry is the mother ministry of India’s paramilita­ry forces also called the Central Armed Police Forces ( CAPFs).

If approved, the policy will result in men serving their youngest and best years in the Army while ensuring an assured and regular supply of well- trained and discipline­d troops for the CAPFs.

The government is actively considerin­g an unpreceden­ted and interestin­g proposal under which the Indian Army will recruit and train officers and jawans for the paramilita­ry forces and after utilising their services for five years before they are sent to join the paramilita­ry.

Mooted by the Army headquarte­rs, the plan is being actively looked into by the ministry of defence ( MoD) and the ministry of home affairs ( MHA).

The Army is under the administra­tive control of the defence ministry while the home ministry is the mother ministry of India’s paramilita­ry forces also called the Central Armed Police Forces ( CAPFs).

If approved, the policy will result in men serving their youngest and best years in the Army while ensuring an assured and regular supply of welltraine­d and discipline­d troops for the CAPFs.

“The implementa­tion of the proposal is contingent upon both MoD and MHA evolving a system of induction acceptable to both,” a parliament­ary panel report on the issue has said. An earlier proposal of the Army for lateral induction of serving Army personnel into CAPFs after 7 years of colour service in the Army was turned down by the MHA.

CAPFs include Central Reserve Police Force ( CRPF), Sashastra Seema Bal ( SSB), Indo- Tibetan Border Police ( ITBP), Border Security Force ( BSF), Assam Rifles, Central Industrial Security Force ( CISF) and the National Security Guard ( NSG). India’s seven CAPFs have distinct mandates ranging from combating Maoists to insurgency in Kashmir and the Northeast, to guarding the border or protecting vital installati­ons and undertakin­g surgical operations.

About 38% of the CAPFs are deployed in Maoistaffe­cted states of central India, 26% in the Northeast region, 21% in Jammu and Kashmir, and the left 15% in the rest of the states.

At present, the CAPFs face a growing manpower problem with 27,862 personnel and officers having quit service either by way of voluntary retirement or through resignatio­ns during 2014- 17, including 14,587 in 2017.

During the same period, a total of 190 CAPF men have laid down their lives while on active duty. The dead include 99 from the CRPF, 45 from the BSF, 41 from the Assam Rifles, four of the SSB and one from the ITBP force.

An earlier proposal of the Army for lateral induction of serving Army personnel into CAPFs after 7 years of colour service in the Army was turned down by the MHA

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