New Delhi: The Central government has provided CISF security to the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) office in the national capital. Now the controversy over this matter has increased. Senior Congress leader and Lok Sabha MP Shashi Tharoor has questioned this. In fact, the central government has abolished more than 3000 CISF posts, making a major change in the security structure at the Indian airport. Now private security guards will be on duty at airports in their place.
Tharoor has expressed concern over the Centre's decision to abolish 3,000 posts of CISF as part of a major security framework change at the Indian airport. Tharoor has said that the government should not have taken such a decision without consulting members of Parliament and airlines. Shashi Tharoor said that if these two reports are taken together, then the deployment of CISF definitely raises questions. Do taxpayers, who are citizens of public airports, have less priority for CISF deployment than their private NGO?
The 2018-19 action plan, jointly prepared by the Ministry of Civil Aviation and the Ministry of Home Affairs, is now being implemented at 50 civil airports across the country. Shashi Tharoor has said that the government should clarify this matter. The central government appointed CISF to make security arrangements at the RSS office in Delhi a day ago. The main 'Keshav Kunj' office at Jhandewalan in central Delhi and the RSS camp office near 'Udasin Ashram' have been provided security by the Central Industrial Security Force (CISF) from September 1, they said.
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