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Last-Minute Internal Security

The CAPF-distinctive last-minute sheet: the five forces, the security architecture, border lines and management, key laws, NHRC and human-rights safeguards, in compact tables

CAPF wiki5 min read10 sections
At a glance
SubjectInternal Security
RevisionInternal SecurityCAPFBorder ManagementHuman RightsPaper 1Interview

This is the sheet that distinguishes CAPF preparation from any generic exam. The written paper rewards clean static recall of the forces, the laws and the borders; the interview board expects fluency in the same plus a human-rights sensibility. One screen per section. For sanctioned strengths, battalion counts and vacancies, verify the latest MHA Annual Report.

The five CAPFs at a glance

Force Raised Founding Act Primary mandate Principal deployment
CRPF 1939 (renamed 1949) CRPF Act, 1949 Internal security, anti-Naxal, law and order Across India; LWE belt; J&K; elections
BSF 1965 BSF Act, 1968 Guarding India-Pakistan and India-Bangladesh land borders Western and eastern land borders
CISF 1969 CISF Act, 1968 Security of installations, airports, metros, ports Airports, nuclear and space sites, metros
ITBP 1962 ITBP Act, 1992 India-China border, high-altitude guarding Himalayan frontier (the LAC)
SSB 1963 (reconstituted 2003) MHA reconstitution, 2003 Guarding open India-Nepal and India-Bhutan borders India-Nepal and India-Bhutan borders

The CRPF is the largest CAPF. All five are under the Ministry of Home Affairs. See the five capfs in depth.

The wider uniformed family

Force Note
Assam Rifles Oldest paramilitary force (1835); India-Myanmar border; dual control (MHA administrative, Army operational)
NSG "Black Cat" commandos; counter-terror and counter-hijack; raised 1984
NDRF Disaster response; raised 2006 under the Disaster Management Act, 2005
RPF Railway Protection Force; security of railway property and passengers
Special Protection Group (SPG) Protection of the Prime Minister

Note: the CAPFs are not "paramilitary forces" in the strict sense; Assam Rifles and the Coast Guard sit under different control arrangements. Use "Central Armed Police Forces" for the five MHA forces.

Border lines and their neighbours

Line Between
Radcliffe Line India and Pakistan / India and Bangladesh
Line of Control (LoC) India and Pakistan (Jammu and Kashmir)
Line of Actual Control (LAC) India and China
McMahon Line India and China (eastern sector, Arunachal)
Durand Line Pakistan and Afghanistan
International Border (IB) The settled, demarcated stretch of the India-Pakistan border

See india borders neighbours and strategic geography and border management of india.

Land borders: length and force (durable picture)

Neighbour Approx border Guarding force
Bangladesh Longest land border BSF
China Long Himalayan frontier ITBP (and the Army on the LAC)
Pakistan Western border BSF (LoC managed with the Army)
Nepal Open border SSB
Bhutan Open border SSB
Myanmar Eastern border Assam Rifles
Afghanistan Short stretch (in PoK) (not effectively held by India)

"One Border, One Force" is the governing principle for single-agency accountability on each frontier. See concept one border one force.

Key internal-security laws

Law What it does
Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act (UAPA) India's principal anti-terror law; allows designation of terrorists and organisations
Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act (AFSPA) Special powers in "disturbed areas"; applies to the armed forces and some CAPF deployments
National Security Act (NSA), 1980 Preventive detention
Disaster Management Act, 2005 Created NDMA and NDRF
Article 355 / 356 Union duty to protect States; President's Rule
Article 33 Parliament may restrict the fundamental rights of the forces

See concept afspa and human rights and internal security.

Threats and the response (one line each)

Threat Response / note
Left-Wing Extremism (Naxalism) CRPF and CoBRA; the "Red Corridor"; SAMADHAN doctrine
Cross-border terrorism (J&K) Army, CRPF and J&K Police; LoC management by the Army and BSF
Insurgency in the North-East Assam Rifles and the Army; AFSPA in disturbed areas
Infiltration and smuggling BSF border fence, floodlighting, BOLD-QIT technology
Cyber and radicalisation Coordinated by the NIA, IB and the National Cyber agencies

Human-rights safeguards (the CAPF must-know)

Safeguard Anchor
NHRC Statutory under the Protection of Human Rights Act, 1993; chair is a former CJI or SC judge
Article 21 Right to life and personal liberty (cannot be denied even in operations)
D K Basu guidelines Supreme Court arrest and detention safeguards
Geneva Conventions / IHL Treatment of combatants and civilians; ICRC mandate
Minimum force and proportionality The doctrine for the use of force in aid of the civil power

For the CAPF, internal-security operations must be lawful and proportionate; the interview tests whether you can hold "firmness with restraint". See human rights and internal security and internal security architecture of india.

Gallantry and commemoration

Item Fact
Param Vir Chakra Highest wartime gallantry award
Ashoka Chakra Highest peacetime gallantry award
Police Medal for Gallantry For conspicuous gallantry in police and CAPF service
Police Commemoration Day 21 October (Hot Springs, Ladakh, 1959)
CRPF Valour Day 9 April (Sardar Post, 1965)

Exam and interview pointers

  • Know the raising year, Act and mandate of all five forces cold; this is the highest-yield CAPF-specific block.
  • Pair every force with its border or role, and every border with its line and its guarding force.
  • Always be able to add the human-rights and "minimum force" qualifier; the board marks for balance, not bravado.
  • Convert any internal-security headline into static facts (who, where, which Act) for the paper.

Cross-references

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