350 complaints filed against VIP security with NHRC
George Iype in New Delhi
Taking heed of the misery caused by the obnoxious extent of VIP security
to the common man, Home Minister Indrajit
Gupta has asked India's intelligence agencies to study the security
arrangements of the heads of governments in countries like the United States, England and Israel.
The immediate provocation for the home minister's order is the
severe assault faced by Martin Massey, a 48-year-old
company executive. Massey was brutally beaten with rifle butts and lathis by a dozen men from the Delhi police for straying on to Prime Minister Inder Kumar Gujral's route last Friday.
Massey's case is one of the more than 350 complaints of misbehaviour,
torture and harassment received by the ministry and the National
Human Rights Commission in the last six years against VIP security.
Ministry sources said Gupta held a high level meeting on Thursday
with the chiefs of the Intelligence Bureau, Research and Analysis Wing, National Security Guard, Special
Protection Group and the Delhi police to review the security arrangements of VIPs in the country.
One of the suggestions that emerged from the meeting was to adopt
security methods used by the US, England and Israel. These countries have been able to offer protection to their leaders without resorting to the kind of ostentatious security cover VIPs in India enjoy.
To cite an example, when the British prime minister moves out from
10, Downing Street to anywhere in London, only one security car accompanies his car.
According to a top Delhi police official, the British police
have successfully been able to provide "invisible security"
to their leaders without disrupting traffic and harassing people.
"But in India, I do not think our leaders will
allow us to offer them this kind of invisible security
cover as an ostentatious security set-up has become a status symbol
for many VIPs," he told Rediff On The NeT.
In Delhi, when the prime ministerial cavalcade moves, the red lights
on all inter-junctions are switched off, the traffic is
suddenly forced to a halt for half-an-hour, a posse of policemen with riffles are stationed on the entire stretch of
the route and anyone straying on to these roads are either shot
at, tortured or remanded to police custody for
hours.
In 1991, Navdeep Diwan, an international business consultant,
was beaten by the police when he strayed
onto the prime minister's route. "I lodged complaints with the home
ministry, the Delhi lieutenant governor and the Delhi police. But
no action has yet been taken," Diwan told Rediff
On The NeT.
On October 2, 1993, the police dragged a group of Gandhians from
Mahatma Gandhi's samadhi at Rajghat. Their crime: They were holding a prayer meeting
when the prime minister was about to arrive.
In November 1993, a bystander awaiting a bus at Rajaji
Marg was shot by policemen. He too had
unknowingly strayed on the prime minister's route. He
survived the bullet injuries, but no action has yet
been taken.
In December 1994, the then chief labour commissioner of India,
Surendra Nath filed a petition in the Delhi high
court after security personnel detained him, snatched his
car key and threatened to shoot him. He was
driving his daughter to school in the morning and the school's timing
coincided with the prime minister's movements.
A dozen MPs were detained for nearly an
hour to allow the prime minister's cavalcade
to pass in November 1995. The incensed MPs brought the Lok Sabha and Rajya
Sabha to a halt and termed it as an insult to
democracy.
While the home ministry is flooded with complaints like these,
officials in charge of VIP security say they cannot
be accused of harassing people as they are directed to strictly adhere to the
Blue Book on VIP security.
The Blue Book says roads and airports have to be completely closed
when a VVIP like the
President, prime minister or a foreign dignitary travels.
Delhi airport, for instance, is closed for 30 minutes
before and after a VVIP flight takes off or lands. Air Traffic
Control has estimated that the cost of such
delays per minute is more than Rs 10,000.
While the SPG protects the incumbent prime minister, his family,
former prime ministers and their families, the NSG
provides security to Z and Z-plus VIPs deemed to be under
militant threat.
The SPG, raised in 1985 in the wake of Indira Gandhi's assassination,
was mainly meant to protect the prime minister
and members of his family. Over the years the SPG's strength has
gone up to 3,000 and the number of people under
its umbrella has risen to 33. Among them are former prime
ministers P V Narasimha Rao, Chandra Shekhar, A B
Vajpayee and H D Deve Gowda. Some 150 SPG commandos guard each
former prime minister.
The NSG commandos protect more than 600 VIPs who are under
Z and Z-plus security cover. They include
Farooq Abdullah, Jayalalitha Jayaram, T N Seshan, S B Chavan, Rajesh
Pilot, Arjun Singh, Mulayam Singh Yadav, Sajjan
Kumar, H K L Bhagat, L K Advani and Matang Singh.
What is more, some 6,500 Delhi policemen and 2,600 paramilitary
personnel are deployed every day at the homes and along the routes of other VIPs like members of Parliament, businessmen and bureaucrats across the capital.
"We have been giving protection to the VIPs by over-stretching
our force. The home ministry has not yet cared to
listen to our repeated complaints," a Delhi police officer said.
The cost of protecting the country's politicians comes
at a hefty price -- Rs 561.8 million. This does not include the nearly Rs 540
million that the government spends on the SPG to protect the prime minister and
former prime ministers.
'They started beating me with rifle butts and lathis in a barbaric manner'
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