The Union home ministry recently sanctioned the launch of the National Academy of Coastal Policing (NACP) from a campus of Gujarat's Fisheries Research Centre located in coastal Okha in the newly created Devbhoomi Dwarka district.
An official order, accessed by PTI, said the first-of-its-kind institution of the country will be created and run by a multi-agency team of paramilitary and defence forces and sharpen the response and skills of the marine forces of multiple states which have sea lines.
The BSF will also provide security to the campus which on the Arabian Sea coast and is at a flying distance from the Pakistan coast.
The navy and the Coast Guard, as per the home ministry order, will help design "the training curriculum, providing skilled trainers and ensuring access to jetties and boats" for the trainees of the academy.
The academy, that will have faculty from the navy, Coast Guard and the BSF, will train police personnel and other security agencies staff in maritime laws, seamanship, boat work, navigation, weapons handling, usage of sea guidance and surveillance gadgets and survival skills for long haul operations on the sea or during distress times when they may get stranded in the these waters running up to 12 nautical miles from the shore.
This was especially required since India faced its major sea-borne terror attack in November, 2008 in Mumbai.
"The academy will run temporarily for about three years from the fisheries department campus at Okha. In the meantime, a new permanent campus will be created for the academy in Devbhoomi Dwarka district," he said.
The official said home minister Rajnath Singh may inaugurate the campus in late April.
India has a vast coastline of 7,516 kms touching 13 states and union territories (UTs). It also has around 1,197 islands.
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