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Residential guards of cops withdrawn

Punjab Police will no more give officers a battery of gun-toting cops as “residential guards” to flaunt. More than 7,000 cops are deployed legally or otherwise as personal security of senior officers, politicians, and private individuals, each constable costing the exchequer about Rs 50,000 a month.

Updated on: Jul 05, 2014 10:11 AM IST
Hindustan Times | By , Chandigarh
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Punjab Police will no more give officers a battery of gun-toting cops as “residential guards” to flaunt. More than 7,000 cops are deployed legally or otherwise as personal security of senior officers, politicians, and private individuals, each constable costing the exchequer about Rs 50,000 a month.

HT Image
HT Image

Beginning in-house reforms from the top, Punjab director general of police (DGP) Sumedh Singh Saini, who has been high on the target list of terrorists and given Z-plus-category security, has removed own “residential guards” of the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) by own order issued on Thursday.

Top sources in the police say the residential guards of all additional director generals of police (ADGP) posted in Chandigarh are withdrawn with immediate effect, in spite of reservations of the security wing. The residential guards of lower-rung officers posted in Chandigarh have also been withdrawn.

DGP Saini confirmed having issued the order. The concept of “area protection” in liaison with the UT Police will replace the system. “In no way will it compromise with the officers’ security,” said a top police officer.

Residential guards are being removed from the already protected premises such as Punjab Armed Police (PAP) Complex. Cops will secure the wider area where the officers live. The move is part of a full-scale security review.

In 2012 also, the government had pulled out nearly 2,000 personnel from the security of many VIPs in the state but the latter managed to get the cover back on one pretext or the other. Recently, deputy chief minister Sukhbir Singh Badal had started full-scale security review based on revised threat perception.

 
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Pawan Sharma

Pawan Sharma, based in Chandigarh, is Assistant Editor in HT and presently writes on Haryana's politics and governance. During different stints over the past two decades, he covered Punjab extensively for 10 years and before that judiciary and Himachal Pradesh with focus on high-impact news breaking and investigative journalism.

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