The Disaster Management Act 2005, the NDMA and its tiers, the National and State Disaster Response Forces, the disaster cycle, and the CAPF link to the NDRF
The National Disaster Response Force (NDRF) is drawn from the CAPFs, so disaster response is directly part of the force family a CAPF officer belongs to, and ITBP and other force personnel routinely deploy in Himalayan and other disasters. Disaster management is also a high-yield static topic: the examination tests the Disaster Management Act 2005, the three-tier NDMA structure, the NDRF and the SDRFs, the disaster cycle and the international Sendai framework. This note assembles them. The wider architecture is in internal security architecture of india; the forces are in the five capfs in depth.
The static spine is anchored to the Disaster Management Act, 2005, the NDMA, and the Sendai Framework (2015). NDRF battalion strengths and the disaster-fund figures change; verify the latest position.
The Disaster Management Act, 2005 is the legal foundation of India's disaster framework. It defines a "disaster" as a catastrophe, mishap, calamity or grave occurrence (natural or man-made) causing substantial loss of life, human suffering, or damage to and destruction of property or the environment, beyond the coping capacity of the affected community. It created a three-tier institutional structure (national, State, district) and the national response and mitigation funds. The nodal ministry is the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA).
| Tier | Body | Headed by |
|---|---|---|
| National | National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) | The Prime Minister (ex-officio chairperson) |
| State | State Disaster Management Authority (SDMA) | The Chief Minister of the State |
| District | District Disaster Management Authority (DDMA) | The District Collector / District Magistrate (with the elected head of the district panchayat as co-chair) |
Supporting bodies:
The line to remember: "PM at the national tier, CM at the State tier, Collector at the district tier."
The NDRF, constituted in 2006 under the Disaster Management Act, is a specialist force for disaster response, functioning under the NDMA.
| Item | Fact |
|---|---|
| Constituted | 2006, under the Disaster Management Act, 2005 |
| Function | Specialist response to natural and man-made disasters (floods, cyclones, earthquakes, landslides, chemical, biological, radiological and nuclear, or CBRN, emergencies) |
| Composition | Battalions drawn from the CAPFs (the BSF, CRPF, CISF, ITBP and SSB), trained and equipped for disaster response |
| Parent | The NDMA, under the MHA |
| Role | Search and rescue, evacuation, medical first response, and CBRN response |
The crucial CAPF link: the NDRF battalions come from the five CAPFs, so a force officer may serve in the NDRF, and CAPF deployment in disasters (the ITBP in Himalayan landslides and avalanches, the BSF and CRPF in floods) is routine.
Each State raises its own State Disaster Response Force (SDRF), trained on the NDRF model, as the first specialist responder within the State, with the NDRF deployed as the national reinforcement. The structure mirrors the federal split: the State responds first, the Centre reinforces.
Modern disaster management runs as a continuous cycle, not a one-off response. The phases:
| Phase | When | What it covers |
|---|---|---|
| Mitigation | Before | Reducing the risk and the potential impact (building codes, zoning, embankments) |
| Preparedness | Before | Plans, drills, early-warning systems, stockpiles, trained responders |
| Response | During and immediately after | Search and rescue, relief, evacuation, medical aid |
| Recovery / Rehabilitation | After | Restoring services, rebuilding, livelihoods |
The shift in approach since the 2005 Act has been from a relief-centric model (reacting after the event) to a prevention, mitigation and preparedness model (reducing risk before the event).
India is a party to the Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction (2015 to 2030), adopted at Sendai, Japan, in 2015, the successor to the Hyogo Framework. It sets four priorities (understanding disaster risk, strengthening risk governance, investing in risk reduction, and enhancing preparedness for "Build Back Better") and seven global targets. India's "Ten-Point Agenda" on disaster risk reduction aligns with Sendai. Related global instruments are the Sustainable Development Goals and the Paris Agreement on climate (since climate change drives disaster risk).
Disaster response has a strong rights dimension: the duty to protect life (Art 21), the special vulnerability of the poor, the elderly, women, children and persons with disabilities, and the obligation to deliver relief without discrimination. A force responding to a disaster acts as a protector of life rather than as a coercive arm, which is the most positive expression of the forces' role and a theme the interview board values. International humanitarian and human-rights standards on relief and the treatment of the displaced apply.
| Often mixed up | The correct position |
|---|---|
| NDRF the force vs the fund | The NDRF (force) is the response unit (2006); the NDRF (fund) is the finance fund; same abbreviation |
| Who heads the NDMA | The Prime Minister (ex-officio chairperson) |
| NDRF composition | Battalions drawn from the five CAPFs |
| NDMA vs NEC | The NDMA (PM) is the apex authority; the NEC (Home Secretary) is the executive arm |
| Sendai vs Hyogo | Sendai (2015 to 2030) succeeded the Hyogo Framework |
| Relief vs preparedness model | The 2005 Act shifted India from a relief-centric to a prevention-and-preparedness model |