New Delhi: The Indo-Tibetan Border Police (ITBP) that guards the LAC with China has sought from the government a continued deployment of its troops in internal security duties so that it can give a "healthy break" to its personnel who man high-altitude icy locations, leading to various health issues among them, official sources said.
The force has put across this point recently before the Parliamentary Standing Committee on Home Affairs and the home ministry in the wake of the Centre mulling on an "ambitious" proposal to gradually remove border-guarding forces from security duties in the hinterland.
The sources told PTI that the ITBP has informed the lawmakers that owing to its primary task of guarding the front marred by very harsh weather conditions and high-altitude locations, it desires to be continuously included in internal security duties across the country so that its personnel "can be rotated between the hard deployment along the LAC and the normal plains".
"The force has sought continuation of the 60:40 ratio deployment, the former percentage being the deployment along the Line of Actual Control (LAC), which is largely in the high mountains. This arrangement allows rotation of the troops, who face very harsh, sub-zero and hard climatic and terrain conditions along the front," an official said.
"The ITBP troops are exposed to various cold weather-related ailments like chilblains and hypothermia due to the rarefied air, blizzards and snowfall. Hence, they need a break from these regions to keep themselves healthy in the physical, mental and emotional sense," he explained.
Most of the posts of the mountain warfare-trained ITBP are located between 9,000 feet and 18,700 feet in the western, middle and eastern sectors of the 3,488-km-long LAC that runs from Ladakh to Arunachal Pradesh.
The government had recently begun working on a plan to gradually decrease the role of the three border-guarding forces, the Border Security Force (BSF) and the Sashastra Seema Bal (SSB) being the other two, in internal security duties with an aim to strengthen frontier security.
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According to the proposal, the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) is stated to be working on a "model" where the burden of internal security duties, including the holding of elections, will be largely borne by the country''s largest paramilitary force, the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF). The about 3.25-lakh-personnel strong CRPF is already designated as the lead internal security force of the country.