SPECIAL
PROTECTION GROUP

The Special
Protection Group, with about 3000 personnel,
is used for the protection of VVIPs such as
the Prime Minister. Recruits include the Police
and the NSG Commandos
and they are trained like the US Secret Service.
The Officer cadre is mainly IPS Officers from
various state/central cadres.
The Special
Protection Group provides proximate security
to VVIPs and the members of their immediate
family. Proximate security includes protection
provided from close quarters, journey on foot,
road, rail, aircraft, watercraft or any other
means of transport, and includes places of functions,
engagements, residence, etc. They comprise ring
round teams, isolation cordons, the sterile
zone, and the rostrum & access control to
the person or members of his immediate family.
The Special Protection Group, over a period
of time, grew both in size as well as in specialisation.
The SPG
is divided broadly into the following four categories;
•
Operations:
Looks after the actual protection duties. In
the Operations Branch, there are components
like the Communications Wing, Technical Wing
and Transport Wing.
•
Training:
Deals with the training of personnel on a continuous
basis. The SPG imparts training in physical
efficiency, firing, anti-sabotage checks, communication
and other operative aspects connected with close
protection drills and having a bearing on VVIP
security with a view to maintaining a high level
of physical fitness and to fine-tune the operational
skills of SPG Officers. The training program
is constantly reviewed and updated to effectively
thwart threats from newer areas and in keeping
with existing threat perception.
•
Intelligence &
Tours: Looks after the
threat assessment, internal intelligence pertaining
to personnel, verification of character and
antecedents, tours and other allied jobs.
•
Administration:
Deals with personnel, procurement and other
related matters.
Before 1981
the security of the Prime Minister at his/her
residence and offices used to be looked after
by Special Security District of Delhi Police
under the charge of DCP. In October 1981 a Special
Task Force (STF) was raised by the Intelligence
Bureau (IB) to provide ring-round and escort
to the Prime Minister during his movements both
in New Delhi and outside.
After the
assassination of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi
in October 1984, a review was undertaken by
a Committee of Secretaries and it was decided
to entrust security of the Prime Minister to
a Special Group under unitary and direct control
of a designated Officer and the STF to provide
immediate security cover both in New Delhi and
outside.
These decisions
were taken as short term measures. Then on 18
February 1985, the MHA set up the Birbal Nath
Committee to go into the issue in its entirety
and submit its recommendation. In March 1985,
the Birbal Nath Committee submitted its recommendations
of raising a Special Protection Unit (SPU).
On 30 March
1985, the President of India created 819 posts
for the unit under the Cabinet Secretariat.
The SPU was then re-christened, Special Protection
Group, and the post of IGP was re-designated
as Director. The SPG came into being on 8 April
1985 when Dr. S. Subramaniam, then Joint Director
(VIP Security) in the IB assumed office.
Creation
of the SPG required an elaborate exercise in
order to clearly deleniate responsibility of
various agencies concerned with the security
of the Prime Minister. The provisions contained
in the Blue Book, which lays down security guidelines
for the protection of the Prime Minister, had
to be harmoniously blended with this new concept
of proximate security.
IB and the
State/UT Police concerned were responsible for
coordination, collection and dissemination of
intelligence affecting VIP security. State/UT
Police and the SPG were responsible for providing
physical security arrangements for the Prime
Minister, while the IB was to provide the required
intelligence inputs to these operational agencies.
The SPG
functioned as a security group purely on the
strength of an Executive Order for three years
without a legislation, from April 1985 through
June 1988. The SPG was constituted and trained
specially to provide protection to Prime Minister
Rajiv Gandhi, in view of the threats to him
from several sources. But, the organisation
created for the proximate security of Prime
Minister Gandhi, did not contemplate provision
of protection to him when he ceased to be Prime
Minister, and faced magnified threats.
After the
assassination of Rajiv Gandhi in May 1991, the
SPG Act was amended in 1991 to provide security
to former Prime Ministers and their immediate
families for a period of 5 years from the date
on which the former Prime Minister ceased to
hold office. The SPG cover for Sonia Gandhi
& her children lapsed in December 1994,
and has been extended for 10 years from the
date Rajiv Gandhi was demitted from office as
Prime Minister.
An increase
of about 40% was made in the 1997-98 Union Budget
in the allocation for the SPG. The former Union
Finance Minister, P. Chidambaram, allocated
Rs. 75.59 crores for 1997-98, reflecting pressure
on the SPG and expansion of the security cover
provided by SPG.

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