CISF to take over Parliament security from Delhi police after Dec 13 incident

By Lokmat English Desk | Published: December 21, 2023 02:18 PM2023-12-21T14:18:06+5:302023-12-21T14:23:32+5:30

The government has decided to hand over the ‘comprehensive’ security of the Parliament building complex to the Central Industrial ...

CISF to take over Parliament security from Delhi police after Dec 13 incident | CISF to take over Parliament security from Delhi police after Dec 13 incident

CISF to take over Parliament security from Delhi police after Dec 13 incident

The government has decided to hand over the ‘comprehensive’ security of the Parliament building complex to the Central Industrial Security Force CISF in the wake of the recent breach of the safety ring, official sources said Thursday. The CISF is a central armed police force CAPF that currently guards many central government ministry buildings in Delhi apart from installations in the nuclear and aerospace domain, civil airports and the Delhi Metro. Experts drawn from the government building security unit of the CISF that guards central government ministries, and fire combat and response officers of the force along with officials from the current Parliament security team will undertake the survey beginning later this week, the PTI report said.

Two men Sagar Sharma and Manoranjan D dived into the Lok Sabha when the lower house was in session. they sprayed yellow smoke inside the Lok Sabha from canisters that they hid inside their shoes. They were caught by the MPs who sprung into action, but questions were raised over the security loopholes as to how could they jump inside from the visitors' gallery. The security breach incident that took place on the anniversary of the 2001 Parliament attack exposed the security loopholes of the Parliament complex. The two intruders had entry passes signed by BJP MP Prarap Simha whose office asserted that many people approach them for entry passes. Manoranjan D, one of the accused, was one to have got the entry pass from the BJP MP's office. Early this year, the accused conducted a recce of the old Parliament building and found out that shoes were not checked before allowing entry -- a security gap that intruders cashed in on as shoes were not checked in the new building either.

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