Privatization Of Airport Security? 3000 CISF Jobs Abolished; Private Security Guards Hired

As a part of a major security architecture overhaul at Indian airports, more than 3,000 CISF posts have been abolished by the government. As per officials, non-sensitive duties will be rendered by private security personnel aided by smart technology tools for surveillance and protection

Privatization Of Airport Security? 3000 CISF Jobs Abolished; Private Security Guards Hired

“The decision was taken keeping in mind the availability of smart security technology at airports now and the architectural changes that can allow non-sensitive positions to be taken up by private security personnel.”

A 2018-19 action plan, jointly initiated by the Union ministries of civil aviation and home along with their field offices of the Bureau of Civil Aviation Security (BCAS) and the Central Industrial Security Force (CISF), respectively, is now being implemented across 50 civil airports.

The BCAS Blueprint

A total of 3,049 CISF aviation security posts are being planned to be abolished as per the blueprint by BCAS, the aviation security regulator. These shall be replaced by 1,924 private security personnel and a parallel introduction of smart surveillance technology like CCTV cameras and baggage scanners.

A senior security officer said that “The new security architecture not only leads to generation of more than 1,900 jobs in the aviation sector, it also gives manpower boost for CISF to meet their increasing aviation security duty requirements at existing and new airports that come under their security umbrella”.

He said that the due to such a move, the aviation security cost for airport operators will also stabilise. 

At airports like in Delhi, Mumbai, the private security personnel are being deployed and others for non-sensitive duties like queue management, security assistance to airlines staff and passengers, and manning of certain entry and exit points within the terminal area. 

He said that the core task of checking passenger credentials at entry, frisking of passengers, anti-sabotage drills, secondary ladder point checks and providing an overall counter-terrorist cover to the airports on the city and air side shall be rendered by CISF only.

The Security Architecture Changes

BCAS joint director general (JDG) Jaideep Prasad said that the “The decision was taken keeping in mind the availability of smart security technology at airports now and the architectural changes that can allow non-sensitive positions to be taken up by private security personnel”.

It will be the BCAS that will approve the private security agencies and their personnel to be deployed at the airports. These agencies and personnel shall be governed by rules framed by it for aviation security.

A senior CISF officer said out of the total 3,049 abolished posts from its 33,000 strong aviation security group (ASG) deployed to guard 65 civil airports at present, 1,924 will be taken up by private security personnel, while the rest 1,125 posts are being used to strengthen security at other airports which require additional manpower due to their expansion or other security needs.

He said the private security personnel will function under its command at the airports, as per the mechanism devised by BCAS.

“Henceforth, any new induction of CISF at the airports will factor-in these new BCAS guidelines so that there is an appropriate mix of trained CISF and private security personnel along with technology tools,” the officer said.

The cost that is reduced due to the replacement of CISF deployment with private security personnel shall then be utilized in order to cater to better meet increasing load of passengers on existing airports and for the new ones coming up in the future without comprising on security.

The about 1.63 lakh personnel strong CISF is the national aviation security force and it was first inducted at the Jaipur airport in 2000, a decision taken by the central government after the 1999 hijack of an Indian Airlines aircraft that was taken to Kandhar in Afghanistan.

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