The NDRF, which was involved in disaster rescue operations like the deluge in Uttarakhand, Jammu and Kashmir and Chennai and the earthquake that struck Nepal last year, has undertaken the exercise on a 'mission mode'.
The force is training a batch of 162 dogs for their specialised Urban Search and Rescue (USAR) tasks under which the NDRF teams have to sift through mounds of rubble to look for life trapped beneath.
"We have undertaken an exercise to train special USAR dogs as they are the best companion of a rescuer during such challenges. This is the first time that dogs for disaster response are being trained on such a large scale indigenously.
"These canines are different from the regular police and tracker dogs and have immense capabilities in sniffing life from under the debris," NDRF Director General O P Singh told PTI.
Keeping in mind the importance of canines in disaster
rescue, the NDRF has sanctioned a minimum of 17 dogs in each of its twelve operational battalions based in various parts of the country.
The force initially got trained its dogs by the experts of the Swiss Development Corporation under the acclaimed International Search and Rescue Advisory Group (INSARAG) guidelines but now it has got a pool of master trainers for the job.
The force has earmarked five locations for the training of these dogs, Labradors and German Shepherds.
"For a good disaster search canine, skills like quick follow up of command, agility, a focused bark alert to indicate life and a willingness to persist to search for live victims in spite of possible extreme temperatures and distractions of various other odours in the atmosphere and noise, are a must.
"No technology, till date, is better than a trained USAR dog with his handler looking for life in a collapsed structure post an earthquake," a senior official said.
