RAF was raised on 11 December 1991 with headquarters in New Delhi. It became fully operational on 7 October 1992, to deal with riots, riot like situations, crowd control, rescue and relief operations, and related unrest.[2][3] The first five battalions were raised by October 1992 and an additional 5 battalions were added in April 1994. In October 2003, with 11 years of service, the force was presented with the President's colours.[2] On 9 November 2013, the RAF Academy of Public Order was established in Meerut, Uttar Pradesh.[4][5] In 2017, the Indian government approved an additional five battalions to be based in New Delhi, Haryana, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh and Bihar.[6]
Organization
RAF is commanded by an Inspector-General of Police (IGP), functioning at New Delhi. The RAF is divided into three ranges headed by a DIGP at New Delhi, Mumbai and Dehradun. It has also a specialized training centre "RAPO" (RAF Academy for Public Order) at Meerat (U.P.) headed by a DIGP. The RAF has a distinctive uniform with a blue-coloured camouflage pattern which symbolizes peace. Its motto is "Serving Humanity with Sensitive Policing".
It currently has 15 specialized trained and equipped battalions, which are numbered 83, 91, 97, 99 to 108, 114 and 194 in the CRPF. Each battalion is headed by a Commanding Officer (CO), an officer of the rank of Commandant.[2] The RAF Battalions of CRPF are located at
the following places:[7]
S. No.
State
Location
Unit
1
Rajasthan
Jaipur
83 RAF
2
Uttar Pradesh
Varanasi
91 RAF
3
Karnataka
Shimoga
97 RAF
4
Telangana
Rangareddy
99 RAF
5
Gujarat
Ahmedabad
100 RAF
6
Uttar Pradesh
Prayagraj
101 RAF
7
Maharashtra
Mumbai
102 RAF
8
Delhi
Wazirabad
103 RAF
9
Uttar Pradesh
Aligarh
104 RAF
10
Tamil Nadu
Coimbatore
105 RAF
11
Jharkhand
Jamshedpur
106 RAF
12
Madhya Pradesh
Bhopal
107 RAF
13
Uttar Pradesh
Meerut
108 RAF
14
Bihar
Hajipur Vaishali
114 RAF
15
Haryana
Nuh
194 RAF
Team is the smallest independent functional unit of the force and is commanded by an Inspector. Each team has three components, namely riot control, tear some and fire. Each company of RAF has one team composed of women personnel to deal with women demonstrators.[2]
The force is equipped with non-lethal weapons for dispersing the crowd with minimum harm and losses. It is always kept in readiness for rapid deployment when the situation so demands and are only deployed by the orders of Ministry of Home Affairs on specific demands from state governments for a short duration.[8]
Role
Riot and crowd control
This unit has been used to deal with communal violence, law and order duty, festival and election duties and agitation.[6]
United Nations Peace Keeping Operations
The CRPF female and male contingents under the arrangements of RAF are deployed in United Nations Mission in Liberia (UNMIL), Monrovia and Zwedru in UN Peacekeeping mission since 2007–08. CRPF Female Formed Police Unit was the first of its kind in the world, which was deployed under the aegis of UN Peace Keeping Mission.[2]
Humanitarian activities
RAF has also succeeded in projecting the human face of the Government and built bridges with the public by carrying out prompt rescue and relief operations during floods, earthquakes, cyclones and outbreak of epidemics in various parts of the country.[2]
^"Annual Report Ministry of Home Affairs 2019-2020"(PDF). mha.gov.in. MHA. Archived(PDF) from the original on 11 June 2021. Retrieved 5 January 2022. The RAF Coys (Companies) are deployed on the request of State Governments for law and order duties, maintenance of peace during various festivals and communal riots, etc. on a short-term basis.