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1400 more CISF personnel sanctioned to manage passenger traffic at IGI

New Delhi: The Centre has sanctioned 1400 additional Central Industrial Security Force (CISF) personnel to manage the swelling crowd at the Indira Gandhi International (IGI) airport, one of the busiest airports in the world. They will secure the expanding areas of the airport. At present, nearly 5,000 security personnel take care of the airport.

According to officials privy to the development, the enhanced manpower has been recently approved after a four-month long joint survey undertaken by security agencies. The proposal was finally moved by the BCAS and approved by the Civil Aviation ministry.

This was conveyed at a high-level meeting chaired by Union Home Secretary Ajay Bhalla on Friday along with the representatives of the Civil Aviation Ministry, the Bureau of Civil Aviation Security (BCAS), Bureau of Immigration among others.

The meeting also reviewed measures taken to ease the recent congestion reported at large airports, particularly in Delhi, Mumbai and Bengaluru. The joint review had estimated creation of about 2,400 posts for the CISF to meet the upcoming needs at the IGI but the manpower was finally rationalised at 1,400 personnel apart from filling up the existing vacancies in the sanctioned 5,000 personnel strength, sources said.

The IGI will have a total strength of about 6,500 men and women personnel after the induction of the fresh manpower, they said. The new CISF strength will not only be used to render the core duty of the force -- of providing an anti-terrorist and anti-hijack cover at the hypersensitive facility -- but also to meet the challenge of the ever-growing passenger footfall, both for domestic and international travel.

The paramilitary force, which is guarding 66 airports throughout the country at present, had deployed about 100 personnel on Wednesday at the Delhi and Mumbai airports to ease the latest cycle of congestion and to meet the due to the upcoming holiday season. During the visit of Civil Aviation minister Jyotiraditya Scindia to the IGI recently, a total of 16 entry gates were operational which has been increased to 18 and will be further brought up to 20 gates.

Similarly, the number of immigration counters and security check lines are also being increased, they said. The BCAS has also asked the airlines and the airport operators to put up posters and send awareness messages to passengers for carrying one cabin baggage and undergoing web check-in before reaching the airport. It has also asked the airport operator DIAL (for IGI), apart from other large airports, to look at the possibility of bringing in advanced 3D baggage scanners and more automatic tray retrieval systems (ATRS).

Over the last two weeks, passengers have been posting pictures and videos of long queues and crowding at the IGI in Delhi and the Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj International Airport in Mumbai, prompting authorities to take note and tell airlines and airport operators to ease the congestion. The Civil Aviation Ministry had also asked airlines to deploy adequate manpower at all check-in and baggage drop counters. /BI/