The Journey of SPG
Hyderabad:The SPG was raised in1985 after Prime Minister Indira Gandhi was shot dead by her bodyguards. Its sole mandate was the prime minister's security.
In 1985, the Birbal Nath Committee set up by the Home Ministry recommended raising a Special Protection Unit (SPU), and 819 posts were created under the Cabinet Secretariat.
The SPU was then re-christened SPG and the post of Inspector General of Police was re-designated as director. For three years, SPG functioned under executive orders.
On June 2, 1988, it got legislative backing through the Special Protection Group Act.
In 1988, Parliament passed the SPG Act. Then, the Act did not include former prime ministers. When VP Singh came to power in 1989, his government withdrew SPG protection given to his predecessor Rajiv Gandhi.
Rajiv Gandhi´s assassination in 1991 led to the SPG Act being amended to provide security to all former prime ministers and their immediate families for 10 years after demitting office.
The last amendment, in 2003, entitled all former prime ministers and their immediate family to SPG cover for at least one year after demitting office and thereafter based on the threat perception assessed annually by the Central government.
The Gandhis had been SPG protectees since Rajiv Gandhi´s assassination.
SPG (Amendment) Bill, 2019: Key Features
The SPG (Amendment) Bill, 2019 amends the SPG Act and states that the SPG security will be provided to the Prime Minister and his immediate family members living with him at his official residence.
The bill also states that the SPG security will be provided to former Prime Minister and his immediate family members, who reside with him at the officially allotted residence for 5 years from the date he ceases to hold the office.
The SPG (Amendment) Bill, 2019 amends the SPG act’s condition to continue the SPG cover of the PM’s immediate family members if the level of perceived threat is high in case of withdrawal of the SPG cover to the former Prime Minister.
The bill states that if the SPG cover is withdrawn from a former Prime Minister, it shall also stand withdrawn from his immediate family members. This means that in case of death of an ex-PM, the SPG security would be withdrawn from his immediate family members.
Under the bill’s provisions, only those family members, who stay with the PM or former PM at the allotted residence, will be provided with SPG security cover.
Different layers of protection
There are largely six types of security covers: X, Y, Y plus, Z, Z plus and SPG.
While SPG is meant only for the PM and his immediate family, other categories can be provided to anyone about whom the Centre or state governments have inputs about facing a threat.
Z plus has 10 security personnel for mobile security and two (plus eight) for residence security.