Central Reserve Police Force

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The Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) is an internal security and combat force in India under the of Government of India. It is one of the Central Armed Police Forces. The CRPF's primary role lies in assisting the State Territories in police operations to maintain law and order and counter-insurgency. It is composed of Central Reserve Police Force (Regular) and Central Reserve Police Force (Auxiliary).

Central Reserve Police Force
Parent Agency - Ministry of Home Affairs
Parent Agency - Ministry of Home Affairs
Central Reserve Police Force emblem
CRPF Emblem
CRPF emblem embroidered on the sky-blue flag
AbbreviationCRPF
Motto"सेवा और निष्ठा"
Service and Loyalty
Agency overview
Formed
  • 27 July 1939 (1939-07-27)
    (as Crown Representative's Police)
  • 28 December 1949; 74 years ago (1949-12-28)
Preceding agency
Employees313,634 Active personnel
Annual budget32,809.65 crore (US$4.1 billion) (2024–25)[1]
Jurisdictional structure
Operations jurisdictionIndia
Political map of India EN
Governing bodyMinistry of Home Affairs
Constituting instrument
  • Central Reserve Police Force Act, 1949[2]
General nature
Operational structure
HeadquartersCGO Complex, New Delhi, INDIA
Minister responsible
Agency executive
Child agencies
Notables
Programmes
  • Operation All Out (J&K)
  • Anti-Naxal Operations (LWE Region)
Anniversaries
  • Valour Day
    (9 April 1965)
  • Police Commemoration Day
    (21 October 1959)
Website
crpf.gov.in

It was founded as the Crown Representative's Police on 27 July 1939. After Indian independence, it became the Central Reserve Police Force on the enactment of the CRPF Act on 28 December 1949. Besides law and order and counter-insurgency duties, the CRPF has played a role in India's elections. The CRPF played a major role in the Parliamentary elections of September 1999. CRPF officers are also being deployed in UN missions.

With 247 battalions and various other establishments, the CRPF is India's largest central armed police force and has a sanctioned strength of more than 300,000 personnel as of 2019.[3]

History

  • The CRPF was derived from the CRP (Crown Representative's Police) on 27 July 1939 with 2 battalions in Nimach [Means North Indian Mounted Artillery and Cavalry Headquarter], Madhya Pradesh. Its primary duty at the time was to protect the British residents in sensitive states of India.[4]
  • 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.[5]
  • On the intervening night of 8 and 9 April 1965, 3500 men of the 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 demoralizing 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 to turn back to old records for appreciation with that historic moment being picked up for celebration as "Valour Day" of the Force after Year.[check quotation syntax]

  • 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 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 ‘Shaurya Chakra’.[4]
  • 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.

The Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) is the premier central police force of the Union of India for internal security. Originally constituted as the Crown Representative Police in 1939, it is one of the oldest Central para-military forces (now termed as Central Armed Police Force). CRPF was raised as a sequel to the political unrest and the agitations in the then princely States of India following the Madras Resolution of the All-India Congress Committee in 1936 and the ever-growing desire of the Crown Representative to help the vast majority of the native States to preserve law and order as a part of the imperial policy.

After Independence, the force was renamed as Central Reserve Police Force by an Act of Parliament on 28 December 1949. This Act constituted CRPF as an armed force of the Union. Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel, the then Home Minister, visualized a multi-dimensional role for it in tune with the changing needs of a newly independent nation.

During the early 1950s, the performance of the CRPF detachments in Bhuj, the then Patiala and East Punjab State Union (PEPSU)Patiala and East Punjab States Union and Chambal ravines were appreciated by all quarters. The force played a significant role during the amalgamation of the princely States into the Indian Union. It helped the Union Government in disciplining the rebellious princely States of Junagarh and the small principality of Kathiawar in Gujarat which had declined to join the Indian Union.

Soon after Independence, contingents of the CRPF were sent to Kutch, Rajasthan, and Sindh borders to check infiltration and trans-border crimes. They were, subsequently, deployed on the Pakistan border in Jammu and Kashmir following attacks launched by the Pakistani infiltrators. The CRPF bore the brunt of the first Chinese attack on India at Hot Springs (Ladakh) on 21 October 1959. A small CRPF patrol was ambushed by the Chinese in which ten of its men made their supreme sacrifice for the country. Their martyrdom on 21 October is remembered throughout the country as the Police Commemoration Day every year.

During the Sino-Indian War of 1962, the Force once again assisted the Indian Army in Arunachal Pradesh. Eight CRPF personnel were killed in action. In the 1965 and 1971 Indo-Pak wars also the Force fought shoulder-to-shoulder with the Indian Army, both on the Western and Eastern borders.

For the first time in the history of para-military Forces in India, thirteen companies of CRPF were airlifted to join the Indian Peace Keeping Force in Sri Lanka to fight the militant cadres. Besides, CRPF personnel were also sent to Haiti, Namibia, Somalia, and Maldives to deal with the law and order situation there, as a part of the UN Peace Keeping Force.

In the late seventies, when extremist elements disturbed the peace in Tripura and Manipur, CRPF battalions were deployed in strength. Simultaneously, there was turmoil in the Brahmaputra Valley. The CRPF had to be inducted in strength not only to maintain law and order but also to keep lines of communication free from disruption. The commitments of the Force continue to be very high in the Northeast in dealing with the insurgency.[6]

Operations

Sri Lanka Mission

The role of the CRPF and its services have extended beyond the nation's borders. The services rendered by the CRPF in Sri Lanka as part of IPKF, as part of the UN Peace Keeping Force in Namibia, Somalia, Haiti, Maldives, and also in Bosnia speak volumes about the ability, agility, versatility, and dependability of the Force to adapt to any conflict-situation round the globe. Presently a contingent of 240 personnel of RAF is deployed in Kosovo as UN Mission in Kosovo is to provide protection and security to the UN officials/UN civil police/ Crowd control etc. RAF coys will also assist local police to control /mob during violent demonstrations, humanitarian and to assist the activities of the ICTY.[7]

Organisation

CRPF (CoBRA) personnel during the Republic Day Parade

Administration

The CRPF is headed by a director general who is an Indian Police Service officer. It 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.

Subdivisions

There are 247 battalions of approximately 1200 each. Each battalion is commanded by a commanding officer of the rank Commandant, and consists of seven CRPF companies, each containing 135 men. Each company is headed by an Assistant Commandant.

The Ministry of Home Affairs planned to raise 2 Group Centers, 2 Range HQs, 1 Sector HQ, and 12 new battalions including a Mahila (all-female) battalion by 2019.[8]

The CRPF force is organized into a headquarters, three attached wings, and four zones. A zone is either headed by an additional director general or a special director general. A zone is subdivided into sectors where each sector is headed by an inspector general.[9]

ZoneBranch / Zone in-chargeBranch / Sector
Operations & HQShri Zulfiquar Hasan, IPS, ADGOperations
Intelligence
COBRA
RAF
Comms & IT
Medical
WorksShri Sanjay Chander, IPS, SDGPersonnel
Provisioning
Administration
Establishment
F.A.
TrainingShri Shyam Sundar Chaturvedi, IPS, ADGTraining Institutions
ISA Mt.Abu
North-East

(Spl. DG-GTY)

Shri Sanjeev Ranjan Ojha , IPS, ADGJorhat
Manipur and Nagaland
Tripura
North Eastern
Southern

(ADG-HYD)

Smt Rashmi Shukla, IPS, ADGWestern
Southern
Karnataka-Kerala
Central

(Spl. DG-KOL)

Shri Nitin Agarwal, IPS, ADGBihar
Central
Madhya Pradesh
Eastern
Odisha
Chhattisgarh
Jharkhand
West Bengal
Jammu & Kashmir

(Spl. DG-JMU)

Shri Sanjay Arora, IPS, ADGJammu
Northern
Rajasthan
North Western
Srinagar
Operations Kashmir
CRPF AcademyShri K S Bhandari, ADGCRPF Academy

Special units

The Rapid Action Force

The Rapid Action Force (RAF) is a 15 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. 5 more battalions were also added in the year 2017 by converting the GD battalion into an RAF battalion. The RAF is a zero-response force intended to quickly respond to a crisis situation.[10]

This force also has a flag signifying peace. The force was the recipient of the President's color presented by Shri L.K. Advani, then Deputy Prime Minister of India, on 7 October 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, which has three components — a riot control element, a tear gas element, and a fire element. It has been organized as an independent strike unit.

One team in each company of the RAF is composed of female personnel so as to deal more effectively with situations where the force faces women demonstrators.[11]

Parliament Duty Group

The Parliament Duty Group is an elite CRPF unit tasked with providing armed protection to Parliament House.[12] 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 protected by teams from the Delhi police, CRPF, ITBP, and personnel of the Parliament Security Service. The Parliament Security Service acts as the overall coordinating agency in close cooperation with various security agencies such as the Delhi Police, CRPF, IB, SPG and NSG.

PDG personnel are armed with Glock pistols, MP5 submachine guns, INSAS sniper rifles with telescope, and hand-held thermal imagers.[12]

Special Duty Group

The Special Duty Group is an elite battalion of the CRPF tasked with providing security for the outer cordon of the Prime Minister's official residence on 7, Lok Kalyan Marg and his office in the North Block as well as during outdoor functions. It comprises around 1000 personnel.[13][14]

CoBRA

Commando Battalion for Resolute Action[15] (CoBRA) is the special operation unit of CRPF created in 2008 to deal the Naxalite movement in India. This specialised CRPF unit is one of the few units of the Central Armed Police Forces in the country that is 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 and 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 Chakras, 01 Kirti Chakra, 01 PPMG,[16] 117 PMG, and 1267 DG Commendations.

Personnel

Rank structure

The organization is structured mainly on three rank categories which include Gazetted Officers (GOs), Subordinate Officers (SOs), and Non-Gazetted Officers (NGOs). The Assistant Commandants are Group 'A' Gazetted officers, directly appointed upon clearing an exam conducted by the UPSC which is held yearly.

Officers
Rank groupGeneral / flag officersSenior officersJunior officersOfficer cadet
Central Reserve Police Force[17][18]
Director-general
-
Special director-general
-
Additional director-general
-
Inspector general
-
Deputy inspector-general
-
Commandant
-
Second-in-command
-
Deputy commandant
-
Assistant commandant
-
Police equivalent
Director GeneralDirector GeneralAdditional
Director General
Inspector GeneralDeputy Inspector GeneralSenior SuperintendentSuperintendentDeputy Commandant / Additional SuperintendentACP/DySPNo equivalent
Army equivalentLieutenant generalMajor generalBrigadierColonelLieutenant colonelMajorCaptainLieutenant
Other Ranks
Rank groupJunior commissioned officersNon commissioned officerEnlisted
Central Reserve Police Force[17][18]
No insignia
Subedar major
-
Inspector
-
Sub-inspector
-
Assistant sub-inspector
-
Head constable
-
Constable
-

Being a central Indian police agency and having a high presence of Indian Police Service officers, CRPF follows ranks and insignia similar to other police organisations in India.

List of directors general

V. G. Kanetkar was the first director general of the Central Reserve Police Force, serving from 3 August 1968 to 15 September 1969.[19] The current director general is Anish Dayal Singh, in office since 30 November 2023.

Sr No.NameFromTill
1V G Kanetkar3 August 196815 September 1969
2Imdad Ali16 September 196928 February 1973
3B B Mishra1 March 197330 September 1974
4N S Saxena30 September 197431 May 1977
5S M Ghosh1 June 197731 July 1978
6R C Gopal31 July 197810 August 1979
7P R Rajgopal10 August 197930 March 1980
8Birbal Nath13 May 19803 September 1980
9R N Sheopory3 September 198031 December 1981
10S D Chowdhury27 January 198230 April 1983
11Shival Swarup30 July 19837 May 1985
12J F Ribeiro4 June 19858 July 1985
13T G L IyerJuly 1985Nov 1985
14S D Pandey1 November 198531 March 1988
15P.G.Harlankar1 April 198830 September 1990
16K P S Gill19 December 19908 November 1991
17S Subramanian9 November 199131 January 1992
18D P N Singh1 February 199230 November 1993
19S V M Tripathi1 December 199330 June 1996
20M B Kaushal1 October 199612 November 1997
21M N Sabharwal2 December 199731 July 2000
22Trinath Mishra31 July-200031 December 2002
23S C Chaube31 December 200231 January 2004
24J K Sinha31 January 200428 February 2007
25S I S Ahmed1 March 200731 March 2008
26V K Joshi31 March 200828 February 2009
27A S Gill28 February 200931 January 2010
28Vikram Srivastava31 January 20106 October 2010
29K Vijay Kumar7 October 201030 September 2012
30Pranay Sahay1 October 201231 July 2013
31Dilip Trivedi17 August 201330 November 2014
32Prakash Mishra1 December 201429 February 2016
33K. Durga Prasad1 March 201628 February 2017
34Rajiv Rai Bhatnagar27 April 201713 January 2020
35Dr. A. P. Maheshwari13 January 202028 February 2021
36Kuldiep Singh16 March 202130 September 2022
37Dr.Sujoy Lal Thaosen1 October 202230 November 2023
38Anish Dayal Singh30 November 2023

Weapons

CRPF uses basic infantry weapons which are manufactured indigenously at the Indian Ordnance Factories under the control of the Ordnance Factories Board. They are also equipped with weapons like CGRLs, 81mm mortars, AGLs, etc.

Awards

List of Gallantry-Medals/Awards as on 14 September 2018

Members of the CRPF have been awarded 1586 medals.[5]

Sl NoMedal NameNumbers
01George Cross01
02King's Police Medal for Gallantry03
03Ashok Chakra01
04Kirti Chakra01
05Padma Shri01
06Vir Chakra01
07Shaurya Chakra14
08President's Police and Fire Services Medal for Gallantry49
09President's Police Medal for Gallantry192
10Yudh Seva Medal01
11Sena Medal05
11Vishisht Seva Medal04
12Police Medal for Gallantry1205
13IPMG05
14Jeevan Raksha Padak03
15Prime Minister's Police Medal for Life Saving100
TOTAL1586

CRPF bagged highest humber of gallantary medals amongst all paramilitary forces. The force was awarded 30 gallantary medals on Republic Day 2022.

In popular culture

The acronym CRPF has been expanded as "Chalte Raho Pyare Force" (lit.'Keep moving my friend force' or 'Keep Moving, Beloved Force') since they are constantly on the move from one troubled place in India to another.[20][21][22]

See also

References

External links

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