The Central Industrial Security Force (CISF) is the government-mandated paramilitary force that guards 59 civil airports in the country and charges a security fee in lieu of protecting these sensitive facilities against terror and sabotage threats.
A top official of the force today said over Rs 750 crore security fee dues were pending with various airport operators, of which an amount of about Rs 737 crore was pending with DIAL (Delhi International Airport Limited) that operated the Indira Gandhi International airport in the national capital.
The ADG said the suggestion to look into the records of DIAL and resolve the long-pending issue had come from the ministry of civil aviation.
He added that the force could only "persuade vigorously" for realising the dues with the two ministries, the civil aviation ministry and the home ministry, to whom it reported.
The PSF is levied on travellers using the IGI airport and the fund collected this way is used to pay the CISF for its security duties.
The officer said while the total dues from all the airports "have touched" nearly Rs 750 crore, the amount pending against DIAL was Rs 737 crore.
The ADG added that the CISF now only carried out a visual profiling and regular checks of differently-abled air travellers, as compared to the earlier practice of asking them to remove their prosthetics and get up from their wheelchairs for screening.
Talking about the manpower issues of the force at the airports, he said a strength augmentation proposal was pending before the home ministry.
"There is a shortage of manpower at the IGI and other airports. Once we get it (the desired manpower), we will be able to do our job even better.
"Right now, yes, it (the schedule of the personnel) is tight, the shifts have to be extended and it is not an ideal situation. But despite that, we are managing it very well," the officer said.
He said the CISF had done away with the hand-baggage tags for passengers at 37 airports and added that by the year-end, more airports would be brought under this new security regime.
The ADG also said a trial for body scanners had been conducted in the past and added that the CISF would want to have them in place for a better screening of passengers and threats.
Asked about the recent reports of power banks posing a security threat at the airports, Ganapathy said the problem was with the "locally-made" mobile power banks that appeared as an improvised explosive device (IED) at the time of the X-ray screening.
"They will continue to be checked," he said.
The ADG said the CISF was also working on a new plan to "right-size" its manpower with the integration of gadgets and with an aim to reduce the security deployment costs.
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