Central Reserve Police Force



































Central Reserve Police Force

Central Reserve Police Force emblem.svg
Emblem of the Central Reserve Police Force

AbbreviationCRPF
MottoService and Loyalty
Agency overview
Formed27 July, 1939
Employees313,678 Active Personnel[1]
Annual budget
20,268.03 crore (US$2.8 billion) (2018-19 est.)[2]
Jurisdictional structure
Federal agencyIN
Operations jurisdictionIN
Governing bodyMinistry of Home Affairs (India)
Constituting instrument
  • Central Reserve Police Force Act, 1949
General nature
  • Federal law enforcement
HeadquartersNew Delhi, India

Minister responsible

  • Rajnath Singh, Union Home Minister
Agency executive
  • Rajiv Rai Bhatnagar, IPS, Director General, CRPF
Parent agencyCentral Armed Police Forces
Child agency

  • CoBRA, RAF
Sectors10
Website
crpf.gov.in

The Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) is the largest of India's Central Armed Police Forces. It functions under the aegis of Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) of the Government of India. The CRPF's primary role lies in assisting the State/Union Territories in police operations to maintain law and order and counter insurgency. It came into existence as the Crown Representative's Police on 27 July 1939. After Indian Independence, it became the Central Reserve Police Force on enactment of the CRPF Act on 28 December 1949.


Besides law and order and counter-insurgency duties, the CRPF has played an increasingly large role in India's general elections. This is especially true for the states of Jammu and Kashmir, Bihar and in the North East, with the presence of unrest and often violent conflict. During the Parliamentary elections of September 1999, the CRPF played a major role in the security arrangements. Of late, CRPF contingents are also being deployed in UN missions.


With 239 battalions and various other establishments, the CRPF is considered India's largest paramilitary force and has a sanctioned strength of 313,678 personnel.[3]




Contents





  • 1 Mission[4]


  • 2 History[5]

    • 2.1 Current role and strength



  • 3 List of Chiefs of CRPF[7]


  • 4 Organisational structure


  • 5 Rank Structure Gazetted, Group A Officer


  • 6 The Rapid Action Force[17]


  • 7 Parliament Duty Group


  • 8 Weapons


  • 9 Women in the CRPF[20]


  • 10 CoBRA - Commando Battalion for Resolute Action[21]


  • 11 Commando 469


  • 12 Milestones of Bravery[6]


  • 13 See also


  • 14 References


  • 15 External links




Mission[4]


The mission of the Central Reserve Police Force shall be to enable the government to maintain Rule of Law, Public Order and Internal Security effectively and efficiently to preserve National Integrity & Promote Social Harmony and Development by upholding supremacy of the Constitution.


In performing these tasks with utmost regard for human dignity and freedom of the citizens of India, the force shall endeavour to achieve excellence in management of internal security and national calamities by placing Service and Loyalty above self.



History[5]


  • The CRPF was derived from the CRP (Crown Representative's Police) on 27 July 1939 with 2 battalions in Nimach [Means North Indian Military and Cavalry Headquarter], Madhya Pradesh. Its primary duty at the time was to protect the British residents in sensitive states of India.[citation needed]

  • In 1949, the CRP was renamed under the CRPF Act. During the 1960s, many state reserve police battalions were merged with the CRPF. The CRPF has been active against foreign invasion and domestic insurgency.

  • On 21 October 1959, SI Karam Singh and 20 soldiers were attacked by the Chinese Army at Hot Springs in Ladakh resulting in 10 casualties. The survivors were imprisoned. Since then, 21 October is observed as Police Commemoration day nationwide, across all states in India.[6]

  • On intervening night of 8 and 9 April 1965, 3500 men of 51st Infantry Brigade of Pakistan, comprising 18 Punjab Bn, 8 Frontier Rifles and 6 Baluch Bn, stealthily launched operation "Desert Hawk" against border posts in Rann of Kutch. It was to the valour of Head Constable Bhawana Ram deployed on the eastern parameter of Sardar Post whose gallant act was to a great extent instrumental in demoralising the intruders and forcing them to retreat from the post.

There are few parallels of such a battle and the then Union Home Minister very appropriately graded it as a "Military Battle" not a Police battle. The service and their sacrifice will now not need turning back to old records for appreciation with that historic moment being picked up for celebration as "Valour Day” of the Force after Year.


  • The CRPF guarded the India-Pakistan Border until 1965, at which point the Border Security Force was created for that purpose.

  • On 2001 Indian Parliament attack the CRPF troopers killed all five terrorists who had entered the premises of the Indian Parliament in New Delhi.

  • When 5 armed terrorists tried to storm the Ram Janambhoomi / Babri Masjid Complex in Ayodhya on 5 July 2005 and had penetrated the outer security rings, they were challenged by CRPF which formed the inner security ring. Shri Vijeto Tinyi, AC and Shri Dharambir Singh, Head Constable, who exhibited exemplary gallant were awarded with ‘Shaurya Chakra’.[5]

  • In recent years, the Government of India has decided to follow up on recommendations of the Indian cabinet to use each security agency for its mandated purpose. As a result, the counter-insurgency operations in India have been entrusted to the CRPF.

  • In 2008 a wing called Commando Battalion for Resolute Action (CoBRA) was added to the CRPF to counter the Naxalite movement.

  • On 2 September 2009, 5000 CRPF soldiers were deployed for a search and rescue mission to find the then Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister Y. S. Rajasekhara Reddy whose helicopter went missing over the Nallamalla Forest Range in Andhra Pradesh. This was the largest search operation ever mounted in India.


Current role and strength


As of 2010, the CRPF is the largest paramilitary organisation of the country and is actively looking after the internal security of every part of India and are were even operating abroad as part of IPKF and the United Nations peacekeeping missions. It is performing a variety of duties ranging from VIP security to election duties, from guarding of vital installations to the counter-naxal operations.



List of Chiefs of CRPF[7]


Shri V G Kanetkar was the first Director General of Central Reserve Police Force from 3 August 1968 to 15 September 1969[8] & current Director General is Shri Rajiv Rai Bhatnagar since 27 April 2017.














































































































































Sr No.
Name
From
Till
1
Shri V G Kanetka
3 August 1968
15 September 1969
2
Shri Imdad Ali
16 September 1969
28 February 1973
3
Shri B B Mishra
1 March 1973
30 September 1974
4
Shri N S Saxena
30 September 1974
31 May 1977
5
Shri S M Ghosh
1 June 1977
31 July 1978
6
Shri R C Gopal
31 July 1978
10 August 1979
7
Shri P R Rajgopal
10 August 1979
30 March 1980
8
Shri Birbal Nath
13 May 1980
3 September 1980
9
Shri R N Sheopory
3 September 1980
31 December 1981
10
Shri S D Chowdhury
27 January 1982
30 April 1983
11
Shri Shival Swarup
30 July 1983
7 May 1985
12
Shri J F Ribeiro
4 June 1985
8 July 1985
13
Shri T G L Iyer
July-1985
Nov-1985
14
Shri S D Pandey
1 November 1985
31 March 1988
15
Shri P G Harlarnkar
1 April 1988
30 September 1990
16
Shri K P S Gill
19 December 1990
8 November 1991
17
Shri S Subramanian
9 November 1991
31 January 1992
18
Shri D P N Singh
1 February 1992
30 November 1993
19
Shri S V M Tripathi
1 December 1993
30th June1996
20
Shri M B Kaushal
1 October 1996
12 November 1997
21
Shri M N Sabharwal
2 December 1997
31stJuly 2000
22
Shri Trinath Mishra
31 July-2000
31 December 2002
23
Shri S C Chaube
31 December 2002
31 January 2004
24
Shri J K Sinha
31 January 2004
28 February 2007
25
Shri S I S Ahmed
1 March 2007
31 March 2008
26
Shri V K Joshi
31 March 2008
28 February 2009
27
Shri A S Gill
28 February 2009
31 January 2010
28
Shri Vikram Srivastava
31 January 2010
6 October 2010
29
Shri K Vijay Kumar
7 October 2010
30 September 2012
30
Shri Pranay Sahay
1 October 2012
31 July 2013
31
Shri Dilip Trivedi
17 August 2013
30 November 2014
32
Shri Prakash Mishra
1 December 2014
29 February 2016
33
Shri K. Durga Prasad
1 March 2016
28 February 2017
34
Shri Rajiv Rai Bhatnagar
27 April 2017
Till date


Organisational structure




CRPF personnel during a bandh in Assam, 2013


The CRPF is headed by a Director general who is an Indian Police Service officer and is divided into ten administrative sectors, each headed by an Inspector General. Each Sector consists of one or more administrative and/or Operational Ranges, headed by an officer of the rank of Deputy Inspector General (DIG) of Police. Now, Group Centres are also headed by DIGs. The Financial Advisor of the CRPF has been an Indian Revenue Service officer of the rank of Joint Secretary and also has Dy Advisors from the Indian Audit and Accounts Service or the Indian Telecom. Service and Indian Civil Account Service.


There are 243 battalions, (including 204 executive Bns, 6 Mahila Bns, 15 RAF Bns, 10 CoBRA Bns, 5 Signal Bns and 1 Special Duty Group, 1 Parliament Duty Group),[9] of approximately 1200 constables each. Each battalion is commanded by an officer designated as Commandant, and consists of seven CRPF companies, each containing 135 men. Each company is headed by an Assistant Commandant.


The Ministry of Home Affairs plans to raise 2 Group Centers, 2 Range HQ's, 1 Sector HQ and 12 new battalions including a Mahila (all female) battalion by 2019.[10]


The Assistant Commandants are Group 'A' gazetted officers, directly appointed upon clearing an exam conducted by the UPSC which is held yearly.


The CRPF force is organized into a Headquarters and fours zones. A zone is either headed by an Additional Director General(ADG) or a Special Director General. A zone is sub-divided into sectors where each sector is headed by an Inspector General(IG).[11]




















Zone
Commander
Sector
Directorate General
DG K Durga Prasad[12]Rapid Action Force
Communications
North-East
SDG P V K Reddy[13]Jorhat
Manipur and Nagaland
Tripura
North Eastern
Southern
ADG Shailendra Kumar[14]Western
Southern
Central
ADG Kuldiep Singh[15]Bihar
Central
Madhya Pradesh
Eastern
Odisha
Chhattisgarh
Jharkhand
West Bengal
CoBRA
Jammu & Kashmir
SDG Sachichidanand Shrivastva[16]Jammu
Northern
Rajasthan
North Western
Srinagar
Operations Kashmir


Rank Structure Gazetted, Group A Officer






















CRPF RANKSPOLICE RANKS
Director General (Apex Scale of the Indian Police Service)Director General of a State Police Force
Special Director General (HAG+ Scale of the Indian Police Service)Special Director General
Additional Director General (HAG Scale of the Indian Police Service, also available to BSF cadre)C.P, ADG
Inspector General (IG)IG/ Joint CP
Deputy Inspector General (DIG)DIG/ Additional CP
Commandant (CO)SSP/DCP
Second In Command (2IC)SP/DCP
Deputy Commandant (DC)Addl. SP/Addl. DCP
Assistant Commandant (AC): Group A Gazetted OfficerDSP/ACP

Being a central Indian police agency and having high presence of Indian Police Service officers, CRPF follows ranks and insignia similar to other police organisations in India.
*There is no equivalence between the ranks of the defense forces and the police forces since there is no government established relativity in terms of rank.




RAF contingent



The Rapid Action Force[17]


The Rapid Action Force (RAF) is a specialised 10 battalion wing of the Indian Central Reserve Police Force. It was formed in October 1992, to deal with communal riots and related civil unrest. The battalions are numbered from 99 to 108.


RAF is a zero repose force which gets to the crisis situation within a minimal time, thus enthuses and immediate sense of security and confidence amongst the general public.


This force also has the credit for having a separate flag signifying peace and was proud recipient of president's color presented to it by SH L.K. Advani, then Deputy Prime Minister Of India on 7th Oct. 2003 for its selfless service to the nation in the 11th year of coming into existence.


The smallest functional unit in the force is a 'Team' commanded by an inspector, has three components namely riot control element, tear smoke element and fire element. It has been organised as an independent striking unit.


One team in a company of RAF is composed of women personnel so as to deal more effectively with situation where the force forces women demonstrators.[18]



Parliament Duty Group


Parliament Duty Group is an elite CRPF unit tasked to provide armed protection to Parliament House.,[19] it comprises 1,540 personnel drawn from various units of Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF). PDG members are trained in combating nuclear and bio-chemical attacks, rescue operations and behavioural management.


The Parliament House complex is shielded by four layers of security, each under teams from Delhi police, CRPF, ITBP and personnel of Parliament Security Service. The present unit of Parliament Security Service was trained, keeping December 2001 attack into his serious consideration.The Parliament Security Service acts as the overall coordinating agency in close coordination with various security agencies such as the Delhi Police, CRPF, IB, SPG and NSG.


PDG personnel are armed with Glock Pistols, MP5 Submachine Gun, INSAS as sniper rifles with telescope and hand-held thermal imagers.[19]



Weapons


CRPF uses basic Infantry weapons which are manufactured indigenously at the Indian Ordnance Factories under control of the Ordnance Factories Board:



  1. Pistol Auto 9mm 1A and Glock 17 9 mm pistols


  2. Heckler & Koch MP5 replacing the Carbine 1A 9 mm sub-machine guns


  3. INSAS 5.56 mm assault rifles


  4. INSAS 5.56 mm light machine guns replacing the Bren L4 machine guns




CRPF CoBRA personnel



  1. AGS-30 Plamya 30 mm automatic grenade launcher


  2. AKM for counter-insurgency

  3. Tavor TAR-21


  4. Micro Tavor (X95) Bullpup.

  5. FN MAG

  6. OFB 51mm Mortar

  7. OFB 81mm Mortar


  8. Carl Gustav 84 mm recoilless rifles

In addition to these, CRPF also uses land mine detectors.



Women in the CRPF[20]


CRPF is the only Para Military Force in the Country which has three Mahila (Ladies) Battalions. After its training in March 1987, 88(M) Bn won laurels for its work assisting the Meerut riots and later with the IPKF in Sri Lanka. Personnel of second Mahila battalion (135 Bn) performed creditably during the Lok Sabha elections 1996 in many states.


At present mahila personnel are deployed in active duty in Jammu & Kashmir, Ayodhya, Manipur, Assam and other parts of the country where they are doing commendable job. In addition each RAF battalion has a Mahila (Ladies) component consisting of 96 personnel.


With increasing participation of women in politics, agitation and crime, policemen have been feeling handicapped in handling women agitations especially because even a small, real or alleged misdemeanour on their part in dealing with any matter related to women has the potential of turning into a serious law & order problem. To cope with such eventualities the first Mahila Bn in CRPF, the 88(M) Bn was created in 1986 with HQR in Delhi.


The successful experiment of the 88 (Mahila) Bn and the ever-increasing requirement of a Mahila component in dealing with emerging law and order situation as well as the Government emphasis to empower the women Department had taken of raising the second and third Mahila Bn i.e. the 13 (M) Bn with HQR at Gandhinagar (Gujarat) in 1995 and the 213 Bn with HQR at Nagpur(Maharastra) in 2011.[20]



CoBRA - Commando Battalion for Resolute Action[21]


In 2008 a wing called Commando Battalion for Resolute Action (CoBRA) was added to the CRPF to counter the Naxalite movement in India. This specialised CRPF unit is one of the few units of the Central Armed Police Forces in the country who are specifically trained in guerilla warfare. This elite fighting unit has been trained to track, hunt and eliminate small Naxalite groups. There are currently 10 COBRA units.


10 CoBRA units raised between 2008-2011 have been trained, equipped and deployed in all LWE/ Insurgent affected areas of the states of Chhattisgarh, Bihar, Odisha, Jharkhand, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, West Bengal, Andhra Pradesh, as well as Assam & Meghalaya is one of the best Central Armed Police in the country trained to survive, fight and win in the jungle. CoBRA is unquestionably/undoubtedly the best CAP in the country.


CoBRA was awarded 04 Shaurya Chakra, 01 Kirti Chakra, 01 PPMG,[22] 117 PMG, and 1267 DG Commendation disc and 31 personnel’s was martyred during operations.



Commando 469


CRPF Commandos are specialized in counter-terrorism, reconnaissance, and sabotage and have the honor of being the most elite among the forces. They undergo extremely rigorous training for years sometimes, before they are ready and when they are done with the training, they can be easily classified as among the toughest and most competent men and women in the forces.
They are specialized to carry out covert operations.



Milestones of Bravery[6]


The history of CRPF is replete with instances of heroic deeds and acts of valour from the day of its inception. CRPF have grown from strength to strength with every such act. The Force from the point of view of its functions and activities has not only remained a Police Force for the mere purpose of helping the states in their anti dacoity operations and in maintaining internal law and order, but today its duties extend, much beyond its original scope, to fight terrorism and insurgency.


The saga of steadfast loyalty to duty, some brilliant achievements and a few noble sacrifices will provide inspiration to the members of the Force for a long time to come.


Till date, the CRPF has been awarded 1586 medals.[6]
























































Sl No
Medal Name
Numbers
01

George Cross
01
02

King's Police Medal for Gallantry
03
03

Ashok Chakra
01
04

Kirti Chakra
01
05

Padma Shri
01
06

Vir Chakra
01
07

Shaurya Chakra
14
08

President's Police and Fire Services Medal for Gallantry
49
09

President's Police Medal for Gallantry
192
10

Yudh Seva Medal
01
11

Sena Medal
05
11

Vishisht Seva Medal
04
12

Police Medal for Gallantry
1205
13
IPMG
05
14

Jeevan Raksha Padak
03
15
Prime Minister's Police Medal for Life Saving
100

TOTAL


1586


See also


  • Ministry of Home Affairs

  • Border Security Force

  • Indo-Tibetan Border Police

  • Central Industrial Security Force

  • Sashastra Seema Bal

  • Assam Rifles

  • National Security Guard

  • Border outpost

  • Operation Green Hunt


References




  1. ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 August 2017. Retrieved 12 August 2017.CS1 maint: Archived copy as title (link) .mw-parser-output cite.citationfont-style:inherit.mw-parser-output qquotes:"""""""'""'".mw-parser-output code.cs1-codecolor:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-free abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-registration abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-subscription abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registrationcolor:#555.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration spanborder-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-errordisplay:none;font-size:100%.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-errorfont-size:100%.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-formatfont-size:95%.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-leftpadding-left:0.2em.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-rightpadding-right:0.2em


  2. ^ http://www.indiabudget.gov.in/ub2018-19/eb/sbe48.pdf


  3. ^ "MHA Annual Report 2016-2017" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 August 2017.


  4. ^ "Act and Rule". crpf.nic.in. Retrieved 2017-07-05.


  5. ^ ab "Milestones of Bravery". crpf.nic.in. Retrieved 2016-12-12.


  6. ^ abc "Milestones of Bravery". crpf.nic.in. Retrieved 2017-07-05.


  7. ^ "Former DG". crpf.nic.in. Retrieved 2017-07-05.


  8. ^ "Former DG". crpf.nic.in. Retrieved 2016-12-12.


  9. ^ http://crpf.gov.in/


  10. ^ "MHA Annual Report 2015-16" (PDF). National Informatics Centre. Ministry of Home Affairs. p. 172. Retrieved April 27, 2017.


  11. ^ "Organization Chart". crpf.nic.in. Retrieved 2016-06-20.


  12. ^ "Home | Central Reserve Police Force, government of india". crpf.nic.in. Retrieved 2016-06-20.


  13. ^ "SDG Message". crpf.nic.in. Retrieved 2016-06-20.


  14. ^ "Southern Zone | Zone | CRPF". crpf.nic.in. Retrieved 2016-06-20.


  15. ^ "Central Zone | Zone | CRPF". crpf.nic.in. Retrieved 2016-07-16.


  16. ^ "J & K Zone | Zone | Central Reserve Police Force". crpf.nic.in. Retrieved 2016-06-20.


  17. ^ "RAF Sector". crpf.nic.in. Retrieved 2017-07-05.


  18. ^ "About Sector". crpf.nic.in. Retrieved 2017-07-05.


  19. ^ ab "CRPF for Parliament security". The Telegraph. Calcutta, India. 10 May 2012. Retrieved 13 August 2012.


  20. ^ ab "Mahila Battalions". crpf.nic.in. Retrieved 2017-07-05.


  21. ^ "CoBRA Sector". crpf.nic.in. Retrieved 2017-07-05.


  22. ^ "About Sector | CoBRA Sector | Central Reserve Police Force, Government of India". crpf.nic.in. Retrieved 2016-12-12.



External links




  • Official website







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