The Director General (DG) of the 1.80-lakh personnel strong paramilitary force, O P Singh, told PTI in an interview that an "economically viable yet strong security proposal" has been prepared by the force and submitted to the Ministry of Civil Aviation for consideration.
The UDAN (Ude Desh Ka Aam Nagrik) scheme was inaugurated by Prime Minister Narendra Modi from Shimla in April this year and the most important factor to keep it running is cheap flight rates for passengers.
"Such a deployment and security system would be more economical rather than a permanent deployment of the force," the DG said.
The actual size of the CISF contingent (between 13-44 personnel) to be sent for the duty will depend on the size and geographical location of the airport under the regional air connectivity scheme.
Singh said the security blueprint prepared to guard such facilities has been made as "aircraft-centric" and not airport focused, as in the case of its regular deployment, as committing such a huge manpower will incur heavy cost.
"What we will do is that personnel from the nearest regular CISF unit will be sent to secure the airport area under the UDAN scheme before a flight takes off and they will return to their base after conducting frisking of passengers, their baggage and conducting other anti-sabotage checks," Singh said.
An example in this context is a place like Durgapur in West Bengal, the DG said, where you have the steel plant (already guarded by the CISF) and the airport (under UDAN scheme) and these can be clubbed for conducting the dual tasks.
What we have proposed to the government and the civil aviation ministry is that the CISF security "willbe aircraft-centric rather than airport centric.They (government and the aviation ministry) are examining it. If he government approves, we can go there.This is like going and coming back task," the CISF boss said.
The Central Industrial Security Force (CISF) is the designated civil airports security force of the country and it secures 59 such airports, out of the total 98, at present.
The UDAN seeks to popularise regional air travel on short sectors by capping fares at Rs 2,500 per hour.
The short flights aim at boosting air connectivity to and from unserved and under-served airports and making flying more affordable for the common man.
According to the Civil Aviation Ministry, Maharashtra has the highest number of unserved airports at 19, followed by Gujarat and Uttar Pradesh at 11 each.
Unserved airports are those where there are no flight operations while under-served airports are catagorised as ones which have three or fewer flights per week.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
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